caveIn 2017 my Website was migrated to
the clouds and reduced in size.
Hence some links below are broken.
One thing to try if a “www” link is broken is to substitute “faculty” for “www”
For example a broken link
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Pictures.htm
can be changed to corrected link
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Pictures.htm
However in some cases files had to be removed to reduce the size of my Website
Contact me at rjensen@trinity.edu if
you really need to file that is missing
Accountancy Theory
Bob Jensen
at
Trinity University
My Accounting Theory Document Was Split into Two
Files on December 15, 2010

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what you can to lend financial support to Wikipedia --- Keep Knowledge Open
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Over 400 Examples of Critical Thinking and
Illustrations of How to Mislead With Statistics ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/MisleadWithStatistics.htm
MAAW's
Accounting Index Updated (great accounting literature guide) ---
https://maaw.info/AccountingForArticlesByTopic.htm
"Advice on Life and Creative Integrity from Calvin and Hobbes Creator Bill
Watterson," by Maria Popova, Brain Pickings, May 20, 2013
http://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/2013/05/20/bill-watterson-1990-kenyon-speech/
U.S. GAAP Financial Reporting Taxonomy Now Available (2014)---
http://www.fasb.org/jsp/FASB/Page/SectionPage&cid=1176163688345
Recommendations for Change on the American
Accounting Association's
Notable Contributions to Accounting Literature Award
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/TheoryNotable.htm
The Importance of Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) ---
http://www.accountingfoundation.org/gaap
Accounting History Blast from the Past
Demski, J. S. 1973. The general impossibility of normative accounting
standards. The Accounting Review (October): 718-723. (JSTOR link).
Cushing, B. E. 1977. On the possibility of optimal accounting principles.
The Accounting Review (April): 308-321. (JSTOR
link).
Abstract
Several authors have examined the issue of choice among financial reporting
standards and principles using the framework of rational choice theory.
Their results have been almost uniformly pessimistic in terms of the
possibilities for favorable resolution of this issue. Upon further analysis,
these results are revealed to be an artifact of the way in which the issue
is initially formulated. Several possible methods of reformulating of this
issue within the rational choice framework are proposed and explored in this
paper. The results here support a much more optimistic conclusion and
suggest numerous avenues of further research which could provide
considerable insight into the conditions under which optimal accounting
principles are possible.
Useful accounting news sites, associations, and organizations in 2020 ---
https://bestaccountingsoftware.com/accounting-news-sites-organizations/
Some Recent Advances in theory of Financial Reporting
and Disclosures
by Ronald A. Dye (Northwestern University)
Accounting Horizons: September 2017, Vol. 31, No. 3, pp. 39-54.
https://doi.org/10.2308/acch-51717 \
This is a personal essay that contains my
views on some of the recent history and evolution of theory of financial
accounting and disclosures. The essay starts by discussing how research on
information economics by Hirshleifer and Akerlof combined with Demski's
critique of academic assessments of accounting standards shifted theoretical
research toward emphasizing the role of voluntary disclosures. Grossman's
and Milgrom's “unravelling result” is reviewed, as are recent modeling
efforts that provide a foundation for studying firms' incomplete voluntary
disclosures. The paper also speaks to some contemporary financial reporting
problems, such as fair value accounting, and also to an assessment of some
recent financial innovations, such as so-called flash trading.
I will conclude this section with one more
example of the application of this disclosure framework in the context of
SEC 10b-5 litigation (this is based on
Dye [forthcoming]).
If a firm is caught having withheld material information, then it is liable
for damages, and it has to pay a penalty to investors who purchased the
firm's shares while the firm withheld information. This penalty is a
(possibly fractional) multiple of the difference between the amount
investors paid for the shares and the price the investors would have paid
for the shares had the firm disclosed its information. Calling the (possibly
fractional) multiple of the investors' overpayment used to assess the
penalty “the damages multiplier,” in Dye (forthcoming). I show that, counter
intuitively, an increase in the damages multiplier induces the firm to
disclose the information it receives less often and, also counterintuitively,
that an increase in the probability that the fact finder detects that the
firm withheld information also induces the firm to disclose the information
it receives less often. Since an explanation for these results requires
delving more deeply into the model than I have allotted space for presently,
I will forgo the explanation here and instead encourage the interested
reader to review the paper.
The preceding covers but
a small part of my own research on disclosures and a fortiori an even
smaller part of the contributions of the profession's research on
disclosures. But, I hope it serves to give at least a sense of the evolution
of a portion of the research literature in financial reporting and
disclosures with which I have been associated, and I hope it also serves as
encouragement to readers, particularly young researchers, to develop their
own contributions to the literature. There is still much to be learned about
how disclosures work and what can be done to improve them.
Introductory Dilbert Cartoon ---
http://dilbert.com/strip/2015-09-11
. . .
Bob Jensen's Threads on Return on Business
Valuation, Business Combinations, Investment (ROI), and Pro Forma Financial
Reporting ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/roi.htm
Over 600 Examples of Critical Thinking and Illustrations of How to Mislead With
Statistics ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/MisleadWithStatistics.htm
Part 1 of Accounting Theory Document
“Accounting for Business Firms versus Accounting for
Vegetables” ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudConclusion.htm#BadNews
Take the Enron Quiz ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudEnronQuiz.htm
Where I Made My Consulting Money and How
Purpose of Theory: Prediction Versus Explanation
Limits of Big Data
Financial Statements Loss of Quality and Predictive
Power
Review of Forecasts and Estimates
Accounting
History in a Nutshell
Should Double Entry Accounting Be Abandoned?
Momentum Accounting and Triple-Entry Accounting
History of
Women in Accounting and Other Women of the World
Conceptual Framework Controversies
Accounting standard setters cannot even operationally define the calculation of
earnings other than to make it a plug that makes the balance sheet balance.
And
yet this plug remains as an exceedingly important driver of share prices in the
stock markets.
Future of the Accounting Profession
Re-branding the CPA Profession
Fall of Managerial Accounting
From Grace
History of Accountics
Accounting Theory Courses
Has the Quality of Accounting
Education Declined?
Thoughts
on Bill Paton and Some Other Historical Writers in Accountancy
Abe Briloff:
Accounting Hall of Fame or Infame?
"Why Accounting Matters," by Edith Orenstein
Accounting for Derivative Financial Instruments and Hedging Activities
FAS 133, IAS 39, and IFRS 9
Accounting for the Shadow Economy
Arbitrary
Allocations and Aggregations
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudConclusion.htm#BadNews
Accounting Theory as Rhetoric and
Hermeneutics
Behavioral and Cultural Accounting, Economics, and Finance
Media Reporting Controversies
Efficient
Markets (EMH) versus Inefficient Markets
(including Black Swans and Fat Tails)
Islamic
and Social Responsibility Accounting
XBRL: The Next Big Thing
The Controversy Over Revenue Reporting and HFV
---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/eitf01.htm
The
Controversy Over Employee Stock Options as Compenation ---
http:/www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory/sfas123/jensen01.htm
Key
Differences Between International (IFRS) and U.S. GAAP (SFAS)
Accounting
Research Versus the Accountancy Profession
Some ideas for applied research (including
sustainability accounting)
Learning
at Research Schools Versus "Teaching Schools" Versus "Happiness"
With a Side Track into Substance Abuse
Why must all accounting doctoral programs be social
science (particularly econometrics) "accountics" doctoral programs?
Why accountancy doctoral programs are drying up and
why accountancy is no longer required for admission or
graduation in an accountancy doctoral program
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#DoctoralPrograms
Essays on the State of
Accounting Scholarship
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/temp/AccounticsDamn.htm#Essays
Accountics is the mathematical science of values.
Charles Sprague [1887] as quoted by McMillan [1998, p. 1][NH1]
What went wrong in
accounting/accountics research?
How did academic accounting
research become a pseudo science?
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#WhatWentWrong
Perhaps the Biggest Controversy in the
History of Statistical Analysis
Should we abolish the notion of “statistical significance”?
-
Real-Science Versus Pseudo-Science
-
Avoiding applied research for practitioners and failure to attract
practitioner interest in academic research journals --- "Why business ignores the business schools," by Michael Skapinker
Some ideas for applied research ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#AcademicsVersusProfession
-
Clinging to Myths in Academe and
Failure to Replicate and Authenticate Research Findings
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#Myths
-
Poorly designed and executed experiments that are rarely, I mean very, very
rarely, authenticated
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#PoorDesigns
-
Discouragement
of case method research by leading journals (TAR, JAR, JAE, etc.) by turning
back most submitted cases ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/thetools.htm#Cases
-
Economic Theory
Errors Where analytical mathematics in accountics research made a huge mistake
relying on flawed economic theory and interval/ratio scaling
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#EconomicTheoryErrors
-
Accentuate the
Obvious and Avoid the Tough Problems (like fraud) for Which Data and Models are Lacking
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#AccentuateTheObvious
-
Financial Theory Errors Where capital market research in accounting made a huge mistake by relying
on CAPM
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#AccentuateTheObvious
-
Philosophy of Science is a Dying Discipline Most scientific papers are probably wrong
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#PhilosophyScienceDying
- An Unlikely Debate Between Leading
Accountics Researchers:
CAN SCIENCE HELP SOLVE THE ECONOMIC CRISIS?
http://commons.aaahq.org/posts/2ae5ce5297
- Essays on the State of Accounting
Scholarship
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/temp/AccounticsDamn.htm#Essays
Granulation Obviously correlation is not causation, but don't suggest this too loudly to
referees of The Accounting Review --- An enormous problem with accountics science, and finance in general,
is that these sciences largely confine themselves to databases where it's
only possible to establish correlations and not causes, because zero causal
information is contained in the big databases they purchase rather than
collect themselves ---
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/temp/AccounticsGranulationCurrentDraft.pdf
Accountics is the mathematical science of values.
Charles Sprague [1887] as quoted by McMillan [1998, p. 1]
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/395wpTAR/Web/TAR395wp.htm#_msocom_1
Tom Lehrer on Mathematical Models and Statistics
---
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gfZWyUXn3So
You must watch this to the ending to appreciate it.
Strategies to Avoid Data Collection
Drudgery and Responsibilities for Errors in the Data
Obsession With R-Squared
Drawing Inferences From Very Large
Data-Sets
The Insignificance of Testing the
Null
Zero Testing for Beta Error
Scientific Irreproducibility
Can You Really Test for
Multicollinearity?
Models That aren't Robust
Simpson's Paradox and
Cross-Validation
Reverse Regression
David Giles' Top Five Econometrics
Blog Postings for 2013
David Giles Blog
A Cautionary Bedtime Story
574 Shields Against Validity Challenges in Plato's Cave
---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/TheoryTAR.htm
Real Science versus Pseudo Science ---
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/temp/AccounticsDamn.htm#Pseudo-Science
How Accountics Scientists Should Change:
"Frankly, Scarlett, after I get a hit for my resume in
The Accounting Review I just don't give a damn"
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/temp/AccounticsDamn.htm
One more mission in what's left of my life will be to try to
change this
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/temp/AccounticsDamn.htm
"How Non-Scientific Granulation Can Improve
Scientific Accountics"
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/temp/AccounticsGranulationCurrentDraft.pdf
Gaming for Tenure as an Accounting Professor
---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/TheoryTenure.htm
(with a reply about tenure publication point systems from
Linda Kidwell)
History of Quantitative Finance "Four features in appreciation of the life and work of Benoit Mandelbrot,"
Simoleon Sense, February 3, 2011 ---
http://www.simoleonsense.com/four-features-in-appreciation-of-the-life-and-work-of-benoit-mandelbrot/
"How Einstein
Thought: Fostering Combinatorial Creativity and Unconscious
Connections," by Maria Popova, Brain Pickings, August
14, 2013 ---
http://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/2013/08/14/how-einstein-thought-combinatorial-creativity/
"Psychology’s
Treacherous Trio: Confirmation Bias, Cognitive Dissonance, and Motivated
Reasoning," by sammcnerney, Why We Reason, September 7, 2011 ---
Click Here
http://whywereason.wordpress.com/2011/09/07/psychologys-treacherous-trio-confirmation-bias-cognitive-dissonance-and-motivated-reasoning/
"The
Art of Looking: What 11 Experts Teach Us about Seeing Our
Familiar City Block with New Eyes," by Maria Popova,
Brain Pickings, August 12, 2013 ---
http://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/2013/08/12/on-looking-eleven-walks-with-expert-eyes/
How
Accountics Scientists Should Change: "Frankly, Scarlett, after I get a hit for my resume in
The Accounting
Review I just don't give a damn"
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/temp/AccounticsDamn.htm
One more mission in what's left of my life will be
to try to change this
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/temp/AccounticsDamn.htm
The Cult of Statistical Significance: How Standard
Error Costs Us Jobs, Justice, and Lives ---
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/temp/DeirdreMcCloskey/StatisticalSignificance01.htm
A Pissing Contest Between Bob and Jagdish: An Illustration of How to
Lie With Statistics ---
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/temp/LieWithStatistics01.htm
"How Non-Scientific Granulation Can
Improve Scientific Accountics"
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/temp/AccounticsGranulationCurrentDraft.pdf
By Bob Jensen This essay takes off from the following quotation:
A recent accountics science study
suggests that audit firm scandal with respect to someone else's audit
may be a reason for changing auditors. "Audit Quality and Auditor Reputation: Evidence from Japan," by Douglas
J. Skinner and Suraj Srinivasan, The Accounting Review, September
2012, Vol. 87, No. 5, pp. 1737-1765.
Our conclusions are
subject to two caveats. First, we find that clients switched away from
ChuoAoyama in large numbers in Spring 2006, just after Japanese
regulators announced the two-month suspension and PwC formed Aarata.
While we interpret these events as being a clear and undeniable signal
of audit-quality problems at ChuoAoyama, we cannot know for sure
what drove these switches (emphasis added).
It is possible that the suspension caused firms to switch auditors for
reasons unrelated to audit quality. Second, our analysis presumes that
audit quality is important to Japanese companies. While we believe this
to be the case, especially over the past two decades as Japanese capital
markets have evolved to be more like their Western counterparts, it is possible that audit quality is, in general, less important in
Japan (emphasis added) .
"Noam Chomsky on Where Artificial Intelligence Went Wrong,"
The
Atlantic, November 1, 2012 ---
http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2012/11/noam-chomsky-on-where-artificial-intelligence-went-wrong/261637/?single_page=true
. . .
People tend to
study what you know how to study, I mean that makes sense. You have
certain experimental techniques, you have certain level of
understanding, you try to push the envelope -- which is okay, I mean,
it's not a criticism, but people do what you can do. On the other hand,
it's worth thinking whether you're aiming in the right direction. And it
could be that if you take roughly the Marr-Gallistel point of view,
which personally I'm sympathetic to, you would work differently, look
for different kind of experiments.
Continued in article
April 3, 2013 message from Bob
Jensen
- Hi Tom,
Although I'm inclined to agree
with you about the decline in quality of financial reporting, but
I'm not as inclined to put as much blame on the accounting standards
setters. Perhaps we've just given standard setters an impossible job.
Much of the blame has to be
placed on the clients themselves along with their lawyers and
accountants who created contracts so filled with contingencies and
incomprehensible clauses that it's impossible to account for them, at
least in our overly simplistic double-entry system of accounting.
There were once thousands and
now ten thousands of types of complicated derivatives contracts,
financial structures, and collateralizations. We require accounting
systems to mark contracts to market when markets are thin and unstable
as morning dew on flower petals in a wind.
I think even you would be
overwhelmed if you were appointed to the IASB or IASB. I know that I
would be dumbfounded in less than a week.
As to externalities, I don't
think we will ever be able to measure the costs and benefits because of
the higher order interactions that befuddle even our best scientists. I
sit up here in the mountains and view first-hand what I think is global
warming. But the scientists who measure temperatures around the world
tell us that temperatures are declining rather than rising. There's ever
so much we don't understand in science, macroeconomics (where we are now
facing complexities we've never seen in the history of the world). and
financial risk contracting that the experts who write the contracts do
not understand.
We bookkeepers clomp around in
worlds where angels fear to tread. We can't even explain why financial
statements lost predictive ability since the 1970s.
Respectfully,
Bob Jensen
From the Harvard Business School:
Working Knowledge ---
http://hbswk.hbs.edu/
Topics ---
http://hbswk.hbs.edu/topics/
Accounting and Control is listed under Finance ---
http://hbswk.hbs.edu/topics/accountingandcontrol.html
|
GMAT: Paying for Points
Accounting Journal Lack of Interest in
Publishing Replications
Rankings of Academic Accounting Research Journals and Schools
Role of Accounting Standards in
Efficient Equity Markets
Controversies in
Setting Accounting Standards
Radical Changes in Financial Reporting (No Bottom Line)
Testing
for Regulation Compliance and the Value of Stratified Sampling
Popular IFRS, IAS, and Other IASB Learning Resources:
Bright
Lines Versus Principles-Based Rules
Comparisons
of IFRS with Domestic Standards of Many Nations
http://www.iasplus.com/country/compare.htm
Should "principles-based"
standards replace more detailed requirements for complex
financial contracts such as structured financing contracts and financial
instruments derivatives contracts?
Why Let the I.R.S. See What the S.E.C.
Doesn't?
Cookie Jar Accounting
Synthetic Assets and
Liabilities Accounting
Time versus Money
Intangibles
and Contingencies:
Theory Disputes Focus Mainly on the Tip of the Iceberg
Intangibles: An Accounting Paradox
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#Paradox
Intangibles: Selected References On
Accounting for Intangibles
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#References
Radical Changes in Financial Reporting
The Controversy
Between OCI versus Current Earnings
Accrual Accounting and
Estimation
Bob Jensen's
threads on corporate governance are at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm#Governance
|
Part 2 of Accounting Theory Document
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm
Controversy Over the SEC's Rule 144a
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#144a
Why do sales discounts have such
high annual percentage rates?
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#SalesDiscounts
FIN 48 Liability if Transaction Is Later
Disallowed by the IRS
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#FIN48
Controversy Over FAS 2 versus IAS 38 on Research and
Development (R&D)
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#FAS02
Management ((Managerial) and Cost
Accounting
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#ManagementAccounting
Creative Earnings Management, Agency Theory, and Accounting Manipulations
to Cook the Books
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#Manipulation
Goodwill
Impairment Issues
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#Impairment
Purchase Versus Pooling: The Never
Ending Debate
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#Pooling
Minority Interests:
Lambs being led to slaughter?
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#MinorityInterests
Off-Balance
Sheet Financing (OBSF)
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#OBSF2
Insurance:
A Scheme for Hiding Debt That Won't Go Away
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#Insurance
How do we account for lifetime warranties?
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#LifetimeWarranties
Disclosure provisions aimed at
financing receivables
and Other Dislcosure Issues
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#CreditDisclosures
CDOs: A Securitization Scheme for Hiding Debt That Won't Go Away
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#CDO
Pensions
and Post-retirement benefits:
Schemes for Hiding Debt
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#Pensions
Leases:
A Scheme for Hiding Debt That Won't Go Away
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#Leases
Accounting for Executory Contracts Such as
Purchase/Sale Commitments and Loan Commitments
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/TheoryOnFirmCommitments.htm
Debt Versus Equity (including
shareholder earn-out contracts)
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#FAS150
Intangibles: An Accounting Paradox
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#Paradox
Intangibles: Selected References On
Accounting for Intangibles
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#References
EBR: Enhanced Business Reporting
(including non-financial information)
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#EBR
The Controversy Over Revenue Reporting and HFV
---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/eitf01.htm
The
Controversy Over Employee Stock Options as Compenation ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htmhttp:/www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory/sfas123/jensen01.htm
Accounting for Options to Buy
Real Estate
Go go
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#RealEstateOptions
The Controversy over Accounting
for Securitizations and Loan Guarantees
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#Securitizations
The Controversy Over
Pro Forma Reporting
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#ProForma
Triple-Bottom
(Social, Environmental) Reporting
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#TripleBottom
The Sad State of Government (Governmental) Accounting and
Accountability
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#GovernmentalAccounting
The Cost Conundrum: What a Texas
town can teach us about health care
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#CostConundrum
Which is More Value-Relevant:
Earnings or Cash Flows?
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#CashVsAccrualAcctg
LIFO Sucks Teaching Case on LIFO Layers in Years of Rising
Prices
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#LIFO
The Controversy Over Fair Value (Mark-to-Market)
Financial Reporting
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#FairValue
Underlying
Bases of Balance Sheet Valuation
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#BasesAccounting
Online Resources for Business
Valuations
See
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/roi.htm
Fade, Gain, and Cost Shifting Analysis in gross
profit analysis in construction accounting
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#FadeAnalysis
Critical Thinking: Why's
It So Hard to Teach
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#CriticalThinking
Understanding the Issues
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#UnderstandingIssues
Issues of Auditor
Professionalism and Independence
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#Professionalism
Quality of Earnings, Restatements,
and Core Earnings
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#CoreEarnings
Sale-Leaseback Accounting Controversies
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/eitf01.htm#SaleLeasback
Economic Theory of Accounting
(including Game Theory)
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#EconomicTheory
Socionomics Theory
of Finance and Fraud
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#Sociometrics
Facts
Based on Assumptions: The Power of Postpositive Thinking
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#PostPositiveThinking
Bob Jensen's threads and other teaching cases
on dividends, payout ratios, and dividends yield ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/roi.htm#Dividends
Bob Jensen's threads on return on investment,
other ratios, and financial statement analysis ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/roi.htm
What's Right and
What's Wrong With SPEs, SPVs, and VIEs ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen//theory/00overview/speOverview.htm
Peter, Paul, and Barney: An Essay on 2008 U.S. Government
Bailouts of Private Companies ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/2008Bailout.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on GAAP comparisons (with
particular stress upon derivative financial
instruments accounting rules) are at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/canada.htm
The above site also links to more general GAAP comparison guides between
nations.
Implications of Bad Auditing on Capital Markets
and Client's Cost of Captial
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudConclusion.htm#IncompetentAudits
Bob Jensen's threads on corporate governance are at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm#Governance
Critical Postmodern Theory ---
http://www.uta.edu/huma/illuminations/
Mike Kearl's great social
theory site
Go to
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#Kearl
An Introduction to Great Economists — Adam Smith, the Physiocrats & More —
Presented in New MOOC ---
Click Here
http://www.openculture.com/2013/05/an_introduction_to_great_economists_--_adam_smith_the_physiocrats_more_--_presented_in_new_mooc.html
Inside the Psychologist's Studio
Videos (interviews with prominent psychologists) ---
http://www.psychologicalscience.org/index.php/members/itps-videos
Great Minds in Management: The Process of Theory Development
---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen//theory/00overview/GreatMinds.htm
Acceptance Speech for the August 15, 2002 American
Accounting Association's Outstanding Educator Award --- http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/AAAaward_files/AAAaward02.htm
How Accountics Scientists Should
Change:
"Frankly, Scarlett, after I get a hit for my resume in The Accounting Review
I just don't give a damn"
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/temp/AccounticsDamn.htm
One more mission in what's left of my life will be to try to change this
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/temp/AccounticsDamn.htm
Essays on the State of Accounting Scholarship
---
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/temp/AccounticsDamn.htm#Essays
The Sad State of Economic Theory and Research ---
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/temp/AccounticsDamn.htm#EconomicResearch
An Introduction to Great Economists — Adam Smith, the Physiocrats
& More — Presented in New MOOC ---
Click Here
http://www.openculture.com/2013/05/an_introduction_to_great_economists_--_adam_smith_the_physiocrats_more_--_presented_in_new_mooc.html
The Cult of Statistical Significance: How Standard Error Costs Us
Jobs, Justice, and Lives, by Stephen T. Ziliak and Deirdre N. McCloskey
(Ann Arbor:
University of Michigan Press, ISBN-13: 978-472-05007-9, 2007)
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/temp/DeirdreMcCloskey/StatisticalSignificance01.htm
Page 206
Like scientists today in medical and economic and other
sizeless sciences, Pearson mistook a large sample size for the definite,
substantive significance---evidence s Hayek put it, of "wholes." But it was
as Hayek said "just an illusion." Pearson's columns of sparkling asterisks,
though quantitative in appearance and as appealing a is the simple truth of
the sky, signified nothing.
In Accountics Science R2
= 0.0004 = (-.02)(-.02) Can Be Deemed a Statistically Significant Linear
Relationship ---
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/temp/DeirdreMcCloskey/StatisticalSignificance01.htm
"So you want to get a Ph.D.?" by David Wood, BYU ---
http://www.byuaccounting.net/mediawiki/index.php?title=So_you_want_to_get_a_Ph.D.%3F
Do You Want to Teach? ---
http://financialexecutives.blogspot.com/2009/05/do-you-want-to-teach.html
Jensen Comment
Here are some added positives and negatives to consider, especially if you are
currently a practicing accountant considering becoming a professor.
Accountancy Doctoral Program Information from Jim Hasselback ---
http://www.jrhasselback.com/AtgDoctInfo.html
Why must all accounting doctoral programs be social science (particularly
econometrics) "accountics" doctoral programs?
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#DoctoralPrograms
What went wrong in accounting/accountics research?
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#WhatWentWrong
Bob Jensen's Codec Saga: How I Lost a Big Part of My Life's
Work
Until My Friend Rick Lillie Solved My Problem
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/VideoCodecProblems.htm
One of the most popular Excel spreadsheets that Bob Jensen ever provided to his
students ---
www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/Excel/wtdcase2a.xls
An Introduction to Great Economists — Adam Smith, the Physiocrats
& More — Presented in New MOOC ---
Click Here
http://www.openculture.com/2013/05/an_introduction_to_great_economists_--_adam_smith_the_physiocrats_more_--_presented_in_new_mooc.html
|
FASB Accounting Standards Updates ---
http://www.fasb.org/cs/ContentServer?site=FASB&c=Page&pagename=FASB/Page/SectionPage&cid=11761563164
The 10 elements of financial statements, according to FASB ---
https://www.journalofaccountancy.com/news/2020/jul/elements-of-financial-statements-fasb.html?utm_source=mnl:cpald&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=17Jul2020
CNBC Explains Accounting ---
http://www.cnbc.com/id/100000341
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting theory
Hi Steve,
As usual, these AECM threads between you, me, and Paul Williams resolve
nothing to date. TAR still has zero articles without equations unless such
articles are forced upon editors like the Kaplan article was forced upon you
as Senior Editor. TAR still has no commentaries about the papers it
publishes and the authors make no attempt to communicate and have dialog
about their research on the AECM or the AAA Commons.
I do hope that our AECM threads will continue and lead one day to when
the top academic research journals do more to both encourage (1) validation
(usually by speedy replication), (2) alternate methodologies, (3) more
innovative research, and (4) more interactive commentaries.
I remind you that Professor Basu's essay is only one of four essays
bundled together in Accounting Horizons on the topic of how to make
accounting research, especially the so-called Accounting Sciience or
Accountics Science or Cargo Cult science, more innovative.
The four essays in this bundle are summarized and extensively quoted at
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/temp/AccounticsDamn.htm#Essays
- "Framing the Issue of Research Quality in a Context of Research
Diversity," by Christopher S. Chapman ---
- "Accounting Craftspeople versus Accounting Seers: Exploring the
Relevance and Innovation Gaps in Academic Accounting Research," by
William E. McCarthy ---
- "Is Accounting Research Stagnant?" by Donald V. Moser ---
- Cargo Cult Science "How Can Accounting Researchers Become More
Innovative? by Sudipta Basu ---
I will try to keep drawing attention to these important essays and spend
the rest of my professional life trying to bring accounting research closer
to the accounting profession.
I also want to dispel the myth that accountics research is harder than
making research discoveries without equations. The hardest research I can
imagine (and where I failed) is to make a discovery that has a noteworthy
impact on the accounting profession. I always look but never find such
discoveries reported in TAR.
The easiest research is to purchase a database and beat it with an
econometric stick until something falls out of the clouds. I've searched for
years and find very little that has a noteworthy impact on the accounting
profession. Quite often there is a noteworthy impact on other members of the
Cargo Cult and doctoral students seeking to beat the same data with their
sticks. But try to find a practitioner with an interest in these academic
accounting discoveries?
Our latest thread leads me to such questions as:
- Is accounting research of inferior quality relative to other
disciplines like engineering and finance?
- Are there serious innovation gaps in academic accounting research?
- Is accounting research stagnant?
- How can accounting researchers be more innovative?
- Is there an "absence of dissent" in academic accounting research?
- Is there an absence of diversity in our top academic accounting
research journals and doctoral programs?
- Is there a serious disinterest (except among the Cargo Cult) and
lack of validation in findings reported in our academic accounting
research journals, especially TAR?
- Is there a huge communications gap between academic accounting
researchers and those who toil teaching accounting and practicing
accounting?
- Why do our accountics scientists virtually ignore the AECM and the
AAA Commons and the Pathways Commission Report?
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/temp/AccounticsDamn.htm
One fall out of this thread is that I've been privately asked to write a
paper about such matters. I hope that others will compete with me in
thinking and writing about these serious challenges to academic accounting
research that never seem to get resolved.
Thank you Steve for sometimes responding in my threads on such issues in
the AECM.
Respectfully,
Bob Jensen
Capsule Commentary Book Review, The Accounting Review, January 2012,
pp. 356-357 ---
http://aaajournals.org/doi/full/10.2308/accr-10189
CAPSULE COMMENTARY
Stephen A. Zeff, Editor
HARRY I. WOLK (editor), Accounting Theory
(London, U.K.: Sage Publications Ltd., 2009, ISBN 978-1-84787-609-6, pp.
xlv, 1,518 in four volumes).
Harry I. Wolk, the compiler of this collection of
74 previously published articles and other essays, died in October 2009 at
age 79. In 1984, he was assisted by two colleagues in writing a thoughtful,
wide-ranging textbook on accounting theory, which is now in its seventh
edition. He has, thus, been a close student of the accounting theory
literature for many years.
Wolk's valedictory contribution is this anthology,
which is divided into ten sections: philosophical background, accounting
concepts, conceptual frameworks, accounting for changing prices, standard
setting, applications of accounting theory to five measurement areas, agency
theory, principles versus rules, international accounting standards, and
accounting issues in East and Southeast Asia. Because he provides only a
two-and-a-half-page general introduction, we cannot know the criteria he
used to make these selections. The earliest of the articles dates from 1958,
and one infers that this collection represents the body of work that, over
his long career, mostly at Drake University, he found to be influential
writings.
Among the major contributors to theory
literature represented in the collection are Devine, Mattessich, Davidson,
Solomons, Sterling, Thomas, Bell, Shillinglaw, Bedford, Ijiri, and Stamp.
Conspicuous omissions are Chambers, Baxter, Staubus, Moonitz, Sorter, and
Vatter. Although many of the earlier pieces have stood the test of time, a
number of the more recent selections would, inevitably, be open to
second-guessing. To be sure, most of these articles can be accessed
electronically, yet it is instructive to know the works that Harry Wolk
believed were worth remembering, and it is handy to have them all in one
collection.
The price tag of £600/$1,050
for the four-volume set will, unfortunately, deter all but the most
enthusiastic purchasers.
Jensen Comment
And to think my constantly-updated accounting theory book (in two volumes) has a
price tag of $0 (Sigh!)---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm
But I do thank Harry for providing me with an accounting illustration that
I turned into the most popular Excel illustration that I ever authored (i.e.,
popular in the eyes of my students over the years) ---
www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/Excel/wtdcase2a.xls
574 Shields Against Validity Challenges in Plato's Cave
---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/TheoryTAR.htm
- With a Rejoinder from the 2010 Senior Editor of The Accounting
Review (TAR), Steven J. Kachelmeier
- With Replies in Appendix 4 to Professor Kachemeier by Professors
Jagdish Gangolly and Paul Williams
- With Added Conjectures in Appendix 1 as to Why the Profession of
Accountancy Ignores TAR
- With Suggestions in Appendix 2 for Incorporating Accounting Research
into Undergraduate Accounting Courses
Steven J. Kachelmeier's July 2011 Editorial as Departing Senior Editor of
The Accounting Review (TAR)
"Introduction to a Forum on Internal Control Reporting and Corporate Debt,"
by Steven J. Kachelmeier, The Accounting Review, Vol. 86, No. 4, July
2011 pp. 1129–113 (not free online) ---
http://aaapubs.aip.org/getpdf/servlet/GetPDFServlet?filetype=pdf&id=ACRVAS000086000004001129000001&idtype=cvips&prog=normal
One of the more surprising things I
have learned from my experience as Senior Editor of
The Accounting Review
is just how often a
‘‘hot
topic’’
generates multiple
submissions that pursue similar research objectives. Though one might view
such situations as enhancing the credibility of research findings through
the independent efforts of multiple research teams, they often result in
unfavorable reactions from reviewers who question the incremental
contribution of a subsequent study that does not materially advance the
findings already documented in a previous study, even if the two (or more)
efforts were initiated independently and pursued more or less concurrently.
I understand the reason for a high incremental contribution standard in a
top-tier journal that faces capacity constraints and deals with about 500
new submissions per year. Nevertheless, I must admit that I sometimes feel
bad writing a rejection letter on a good study, just because some other
research team beat the authors to press with similar conclusions documented
a few months earlier. Research, it seems, operates in a highly competitive
arena.
Fortunately, from time to time, we
receive related but still distinct submissions that, in combination, capture
synergies (and reviewer support) by viewing a broad research question from
different perspectives. The two articles comprising this issue’s forum are a
classic case in point. Though both studies reach the same basic conclusion
that material weaknesses in internal controls over financial reporting
result in negative repercussions for the cost of debt financing, Dhaliwal et
al. (2011) do so by examining the public market for corporate debt
instruments, whereas Kim et al. (2011) examine private debt contracting with
financial institutions. These different perspectives enable the two research
teams to pursue different secondary analyses, such as Dhaliwal et al.’s
examination of the sensitivity of the reported findings to bank monitoring
and Kim et al.’s examination of debt covenants.
Both studies also overlap with yet a
third recent effort in this arena, recently published in the
Journal of Accounting
Research by Costello and
Wittenberg-Moerman (2011). Although the overall
‘‘punch
line’’
is similar in all three studies (material
internal control weaknesses result in a higher cost of debt), I am intrigued
by a ‘‘mini-debate’’
of sorts on the different conclusions
reache by Costello and Wittenberg-Moerman (2011) and by Kim et al.
(2011) for the effect of material weaknesses on debt covenants.
Specifically, Costello and Wittenberg-Moerman (2011, 116) find that
‘‘serious,
fraud-related weaknesses result in a significant decrease in financial
covenants,’’
presumably because banks substitute more
direct protections in such instances, whereas Kim et al.
Published Online: July 2011
(2011) assert from their cross-sectional
design that company-level material weaknesses are associated with
more
financial covenants in
debt contracting.
In reconciling these conflicting
findings, Costello and Wittenberg-Moerman (2011, 116) attribute the Kim et
al. (2011) result to underlying
‘‘differences
in more fundamental firm characteristics, such as riskiness and information
opacity,’’
given that, cross-sectionally, material
weakness firms have a greater number of financial covenants than do
non-material weakness firms even
before the disclosure of the material
weakness in internal controls. Kim et al. (2011) counter that they control
for risk and opacity characteristics, and that advance leakage of internal
control problems could still result in a debt covenant effect due to
internal controls rather than underlying firm characteristics. Kim et al.
(2011) also report from a supplemental change analysis that, comparing the
pre- and post-SOX 404 periods, the number of debt covenants falls for
companies both with and without
material
weaknesses in internal controls, raising the question of whether the
Costello and Wittenberg-Moerman (2011)
finding reflects a reaction to the disclosures or simply a more general
trend of a declining number of debt covenants affecting all firms around
that time period. I urge readers to take a look at both articles, along with
Dhaliwal et al. (2011), and draw their own conclusions. Indeed, I believe
that these sorts . . .
Continued in article
Jensen Comment
Without admitting to it, I think Steve has been embarrassed, along with many
other accountics researchers, about the virtual absence of validation and
replication of accounting science (accountics) research studies over the past
five decades. For the most part, accountics articles are either ignored or
accepted as truth without validation. Behavioral and capital markets empirical
studies are rarely (ever?) replicated. Analytical studies make tremendous leaps
of faith in terms of underlying assumptions that are rarely challenged (such as
the assumption of equations depicting utility functions of corporations).
Accounting science thereby has become a pseudo
science where highly paid accountics professor referees are protecting each
others' butts ---
"574 Shields Against Validity Challenges in Plato's Cave" ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/TheoryTAR.htm
The above link contains Steve's rejoinders on the replication debate.
In the above editorial he's telling us that there is a middle ground for
validation of accountics studies. When researchers independently come to similar
conclusions using different data sets and different quantitative analyses they
are in a sense validating each others' work without truly replicating each
others' work.
I agree with Steve on this, but I would also argue that these types of
"validation" is too little to late relative to genuine science where replication
and true validation are essential to the very definition of science. The types
independent but related research that Steve is discussing above is too
infrequent and haphazard to fall into the realm of validation and replication.
When's the last time you witnesses a TAR author criticizing the research of
another TAR author (TAR does not publish critical commentaries)?
Are TAR articles really all that above criticism?
Even though I admire Steve's scholarship, dedication,
and sacrifice, I hope future TAR editors will work harder at turning accountics
research into real science!
What Went Wrong With Accountics Research? ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#WhatWentWrong
"574 Shields Against Validity Challenges in Plato's Cave" ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/TheoryTAR.htm
Jean-Paul Sartre Breaks Down the Bad Faith of Intellectuals ---
Click Here
http://www.openculture.com/2011/12/jean-paul_sartre_on_the_bad_faith_of_modern_intellectuals.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+OpenCulture+%28Open+Culture%29
"Noam Chomsky on Where Artificial Intelligence Went Wrong," The
Atlantic, November 1, 2012 ---
http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2012/11/noam-chomsky-on-where-artificial-intelligence-went-wrong/261637/?single_page=true
. . .
People tend to study what you know how to study, I
mean that makes sense. You have certain experimental techniques, you have
certain level of understanding, you try to push the envelope -- which is
okay, I mean, it's not a criticism, but people do what you can do. On the
other hand, it's worth thinking whether you're aiming in the right
direction. And it could be that if you take roughly the Marr-Gallistel point
of view, which personally I'm sympathetic to, you would work differently,
look for different kind of experiments.
Continued in article
"Is Modern Portfolio Theory Dead? Come On," by Paul Pfleiderer,
TechCrunch, August 11, 2012 ---
http://techcrunch.com/2012/08/11/is-modern-portfolio-theory-dead-come-on/
A few weeks ago, TechCrunch published a piece
arguing software is better at investing than 99% of human investment
advisors. That post, titled
Thankfully, Software Is Eating The Personal Investing World,
pointed out the advantages of engineering-driven
software solutions versus emotionally driven human judgment. Perhaps not
surprisingly, some commenters (including some financial advisors) seized the
moment to call into question one of the foundations of software-based
investing, Modern Portfolio Theory.
Given the doubts raised by a small but vocal
chorus, it’s worth spending some time to ask if we need a new investing
paradigm and if so, what it should be. Answering that question helps show
why MPT still is the best investment methodology out there; it enables the
automated, low-cost investment management offered by a new wave of Internet
startups including
Wealthfront
(which I advise),
Personal Capital,
Future Advisor
and SigFig.
The basic questions being raised about MPT run
something like this:
- Hasn’t recent experience – i.e., the financial
crisis — shown that diversification doesn’t work?
- Shouldn’t we primarily worry about “Black
Swan” events and unforeseen risk?
- Don’t these unknown unknowns mean we must
develop a new approach to investing?
Let’s begin by briefly laying out the key insights
of MPT.
MPT is based in part on the assumption that most
investors don’t like risk and need to be compensated for bearing it. That
compensation comes in the form of higher average returns. Historical data
strongly supports this assumption. For example, from 1926 to 2011 the
average (geometric) return on U.S. Treasury Bills was 3.6%. Over the same
period the average return on large company stocks was 9.8%; that on small
company stocks was 11.2% ( See 2012 Ibbotson Stocks, Bonds, Bills and
Inflation (SBBI) Valuation Yearbook, Morningstar, Inc., page 23. ). Stocks,
of course, are much riskier than Treasuries, so we expect them to have
higher average returns — and they do.
One of MPT’s key insights is that while investors
need to be compensated to bear risk, not all risks are rewarded. The market
does not reward risks that can be “diversified away” by holding a bundle of
investments, instead of a single investment. By recognizing that not all
risks are rewarded, MPT helped establish the idea that a diversified
portfolio can help investors earn a higher return for the same amount of
risk.
To understand which risks can be diversified away,
and why, consider Zynga. Zynga hit $14.69 in March and has since dropped to
less than $2 per share. Based on what’s happened over the past few months,
the major risks associated with Zynga’s stock are things such as delays in
new game development, the fickle taste of consumers and changes on Facebook
that affect users’ engagement with Zynga’s games.
For company insiders, who have much of their wealth
tied up in the company, Zynga is clearly a risky investment. Although those
insiders are exposed to huge risks, they aren’t the investors who determine
the “risk premium” for Zynga. (A stock’s risk premium is the extra return
the stock is expected to earn that compensates for the stock’s risk.)
Rather, institutional funds and other large
investors establish the risk premium by deciding what price they’re willing
to pay to hold Zynga in their diversified portfolios. If a Zynga game is
delayed, and Zynga’s stock price drops, that decline has a miniscule effect
on a diversified shareholder’s portfolio returns. Because of this, the
market does not price in that particular risk. Even the overall turbulence
in many Internet stocks won’t be problematic for investors who are well
diversified in their portfolios.
Modern Portfolio Theory focuses on constructing
portfolios that avoid exposing the investor to those kinds of unrewarded
risks. The main lesson is that investors should choose portfolios that lie
on the Efficient Frontier, the mathematically defined curve that describes
the relationship between risk and reward. To be on the frontier, a portfolio
must provide the highest expected return (largest reward) among all
portfolios having the same level of risk. The Internet startups construct
well-diversified portfolios designed to be efficient with the right
combination of risk and return for their clients.
Now let’s ask if anything in the past five years
casts doubt on these basic tenets of Modern Portfolio Theory. The answer is
clearly, “No.” First and foremost, nothing has changed the fact that there
are many unrewarded risks, and that investors should avoid these risks. The
major risks of Zynga stock remain diversifiable risks, and unless you’re
willing to trade illegally on inside information about, say, upcoming
changes to Facebook’s gaming policies, you should avoid holding a
concentrated position in Zynga.
The efficient frontier is still the desirable place
to be, and it makes no sense to follow a policy that puts you in a position
well below that frontier.
Most of the people who say that “diversification
failed” in the financial crisis have in mind not the diversification gains
associated with avoiding concentrated investments in companies like Zynga,
but the diversification gains that come from investing across many different
asset classes, such as domestic stocks, foreign stocks, real estate and
bonds. Those critics aren’t challenging the idea of diversification in
general – probably because such an effort would be nonsensical.
True, diversification across asset classes didn’t
shelter investors from 2008’s turmoil. In that year, the S&P 500 index fell
37%, the MSCI EAFE index (the index of developed markets outside North
America) fell by 43%, the MSCI Emerging Market index fell by 53%, the Dow
Jones Commodities Index fell by 35%, and the Lehman High Yield Bond Index
fell by 26%. The historical record shows that in times of economic distress,
asset class returns tend to move in the same direction and be more highly
correlated. These increased correlations are no doubt due to the increased
importance of macro factors driving corporate cash flows. The increased
correlations limit, but do not eliminate, diversification’s value. It would
be foolish to conclude from this that you should be undiversified. If a seat
belt doesn’t provide perfect protection, it still makes sense to wear one.
Statistics show it’s better to wear a seatbelt than to not wear one.
Similarly, statistics show diversification reduces risk, and that you are
better off diversifying than not.
Timing the market
The obvious question to ask anyone who insists
diversification across asset classes is not effective is: What is the
alternative? Some say “Time the market.” Make sure you hold an asset class
when it is earning good returns, but sell as soon as things are about to go
south. Even better, take short positions when the outlook is negative. With
a trustworthy crystal ball, this is a winning strategy. The potential gains
are huge. If you had perfect foresight and could time the S&P 500
on a daily basis, you could have turned $1,000 on Jan. 1, 2000, into
$120,975,000 on Dec. 31, 2009, just by going in and out of the market. If
you could also short the market when appropriate, the gains would have been
even more spectacular!
Sometimes, it seems someone may have a fairly
reliable crystal ball. Consider John Paulson, who in 2007 and 2008 seemed so
prescient in profiting from the subprime market’s collapse. It appears,
however, that Mr. Paulson’s crystal ball became less reliable after his
stunning success in 2007. His Advantage Plus fund experienced more than a
50% loss in 2011. Separating luck from skill is often difficult.
Some people try to come up with a way to time the
market based on historical data. In fact a large number of strategies will
work well “in the back test.” The question is whether any system is reliable
enough to use for future investing.
There are at least three reasons to be cautious
about substituting a timing system for diversification.
- First, a timing system that does not work can
impose significant transaction costs (including avoidable adverse tax
consequences) on the investor for no gain.
- Second, an ill-founded timing strategy
generally exposes the investor to risk that is unrewarded. In other
words, it puts the investor below the frontier, which is not a good
place to be.
- Third, a timing system’s success may create
the seeds of its own destruction. If too many investors blindly follow
the strategy, prices will be driven to erase any putative gains that
might have been there, turning the strategy into a losing proposition.
Also, a timing strategy designed to “beat the market” must involve
trading into “good” positions and away from “bad” ones. That means there
must be a sucker (or several suckers) available to take on the other
(losing) sides. (No doubt in most cases each party to the trade thinks
the sucker is on the other side.)
Black Swans
What about those Black Swans? Doesn’t MPT ignore
the possibility that we can be surprised by the unexpected? Isn’t it
impossible to measure risk when there are unknown unknowns?
Most people recognize that financial markets are
not like simple games of chance where risk can be quantified precisely. As
we’ve seen (e.g., the “Black Monday” stock market crash of 1987 and the
“flash crash” of 2010), the markets can produce extreme events that hardly
anyone contemplated as a possibility. As opposed to poker, where we always
draw from the same 52-card deck, in financial markets, asset returns are
drawn from changing distributions as the world economy and financial
relationships change.
Some Black Swan events turned out to have limited
effects on investors over the long term. Although the market dropped
precipitously in October 1987, it was close to fully recovered in June 1988.
The flash crash was confined to a single day.
This is not to say that all “surprise” events are transitory. The Great
Depression followed the stock market crash of 1929, and the effects of the
financial crisis in 2007 and 2008 linger on five years later.
The question is, how should we respond to
uncertainties and Black Swans? One sensible way is to be more diligent in
quantifying the risks we can see. For example, since extreme events don’t
happen often, we’re likely to be misled if we base our risk assessment on
what has occurred over short time periods. We shouldn’t conclude that just
because housing prices haven’t gone down over 20 years that a housing
decline is not a meaningful risk. In the case of natural disasters like
earthquakes, tsunamis, asteroid strikes and solar storms, the long run could
be very long indeed. While we can’t capture all risks by looking far back in
time, taking into account long-term data means we’re less likely to be
surprised.
Some people suggest you should respond to the risk
of unknown unknowns by investing very conservatively. This means allocating
most of the portfolio to “safe assets” and significantly reducing exposure
to risky assets, which are likely to be affected by Black Swan surprises.
This response is consistent with MPT. If you worry about Black Swans, you
are, for all intents and purposes, a very risk-averse investor. The MPT
portfolio position for very risk-averse investors is a position on the
efficient frontier that has little risk.
The cost of investing in a low-risk position is a
lower expected return (recall that historically the average return on stocks
was about three times that on U.S. Treasuries), but maybe you think that’s a
price worth paying. Can everyone take extremely conservative positions to
avoid Black Swan risk? This clearly won’t work, because some investors must
hold risky assets. If all investors try to avoid Black Swan events, the
prices of those risky assets will fall to a point where the forecasted
returns become too large to ignore.
Continued in article
Jensen Comment
All quant theories and strategies in finance are based upon some foundational
assumptions that in rare instances turn into the
Achilles'
heel of the entire superstructure. The classic example is the wonderful
theory and arbitrage strategy of Long Term Capital Management (LTCM) formed by
the best quants in finance (two with Nobel Prizes in economics). After
remarkable successes one nickel at a time in a secret global arbitrage strategy
based heavily on the Black-Scholes Model, LTCM placed a trillion dollar bet that
failed dramatically and became the only hedge fund that nearly imploded all of
Wall Street. At a heavy cost, Wall Street investment bankers pooled billions of
dollars to quietly shut down LTCM ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#LTCM
So what was the Achilles heal of the arbitrage strategy of LTCM? It was an
assumption that a huge portion of the global financial market would not collapse
all at once. Low and behold, the Asian financial markets collapsed all at once
and left LTCM naked and dangling from a speculative cliff.
There is a tremendous (one of the best
videos I've ever seen on the Black-Scholes Model) PBS Nova video called
"Trillion Dollar Bet" explaining why LTCM
collapsed. Go to
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/stockmarket/
This video is in the media libraries on most college campuses. I highly
recommend showing this video to students. It is extremely well done and
exciting to watch.
One of the more interesting summaries is the Report of The President’s
Working Group on Financial Markets, April 1999 ---
http://www.ustreas.gov/press/releases/reports/hedgfund.pdf
The principal
policy issue arising out of the events surrounding the near collapse of LTCM
is how to constrain excessive leverage. By increasing the chance that
problems at one financial institution could be transmitted to other
institutions, excessive leverage can increase the likelihood of a general
breakdown in the functioning of financial markets. This issue is not limited
to hedge funds; other financial institutions are often larger and more
highly leveraged than most hedge funds.
What went wrong at Long Term Capital
Management? ---
http://www.killer-essays.com/Economics/euz220.shtml
The video and above reports, however, do not delve into the tax shelter
pushed by Myron Scholes and his other LTCM partners. A nice summary of the tax
shelter case with links to other documents can be found at
http://www.cambridgefinance.com/CFP-LTCM.pdf
The above August 27,
2004 ruling by Judge Janet Bond Arterton rounds out the "Trillion Dollar Bet."
The classic and enormous scandal was
Long Term Capital led by Nobel Prize winning Merton and Scholes (actually the
blame is shared with their devoted doctoral students). There is a tremendous
(one of the best videos I've ever seen on the Black-Scholes Model) PBS Nova
video ("Trillion Dollar Bet") explaining why LTC collapsed. Go to
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/stockmarket/
Another illustration of the Achilles' heel of a popular mathematical theory
and strategy is the 2008 collapse mortgage-backed CDO financial risk bonds based
upon David Li's Gaussian copula function of risk diversification in portfolios.
The Achilles' heel was the assumption that the real estate bubble would not
burst to a point where millions of subprime mortgages would all go into default
at roughly the same time.
Can the 2008 investment banking failure be traced to a math error?
Recipe for Disaster: The Formula That Killed Wall Street ---
http://www.wired.com/techbiz/it/magazine/17-03/wp_quant?currentPage=all
Link forwarded by Jim Mahar ---
http://financeprofessorblog.blogspot.com/2009/03/recipe-for-disaster-formula-that-killed.html
Some highlights:
"For five years, Li's formula, known as a
Gaussian copula function, looked like an unambiguously positive
breakthrough, a piece of financial technology that allowed hugely
complex risks to be modeled with more ease and accuracy than ever
before. With his brilliant spark of mathematical legerdemain, Li made it
possible for traders to sell vast quantities of new securities,
expanding financial markets to unimaginable levels.
His method was adopted by everybody from bond
investors and Wall Street banks to ratings agencies and regulators. And
it became so deeply entrenched—and was making people so much money—that
warnings about its limitations were largely ignored.
Then the model fell apart." The article goes on to show that correlations
are at the heart of the problem.
"The reason that ratings agencies and investors
felt so safe with the triple-A tranches was that they believed there was
no way hundreds of homeowners would all default on their loans at the
same time. One person might lose his job, another might fall ill. But
those are individual calamities that don't affect the mortgage pool much
as a whole: Everybody else is still making their payments on time.
But not all calamities are individual, and
tranching still hadn't solved all the problems of mortgage-pool risk.
Some things, like falling house prices, affect a large number of people
at once. If home values in your neighborhood decline and you lose some
of your equity, there's a good chance your neighbors will lose theirs as
well. If, as a result, you default on your mortgage, there's a higher
probability they will default, too. That's called correlation—the degree
to which one variable moves in line with another—and measuring it is an
important part of determining how risky mortgage bonds are."
I would highly recommend reading the entire thing that gets much more
involved with the
actual formula etc.
The
“math error” might truly be have been an error or it might have simply been a
gamble with what was perceived as miniscule odds of total market failure.
Something similar happened in the case of the trillion-dollar disastrous 1993
collapse of Long Term Capital Management formed by Nobel Prize winning
economists and their doctoral students who took similar gambles that ignored the
“miniscule odds” of world market collapse -- -
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#LTCM
The rhetorical question is whether the failure is ignorance in model building or
risk taking using the model?
"In Plato's Cave:
Mathematical models are a powerful way of predicting financial markets. But they
are fallible" The Economist, January 24, 2009, pp. 10-14 ---
http://www.economist.com/specialreports/displaystory.cfm?story_id=12957753
ROBERT RUBIN was Bill Clinton’s treasury
secretary. He has worked at the top of Goldman Sachs and Citigroup. But he
made arguably the single most influential decision of his long career in
1983, when as head of risk arbitrage at Goldman he went to the MIT Sloan
School of Management in Cambridge, Massachusetts, to hire an economist
called Fischer Black.
A decade earlier Myron Scholes, Robert
Merton and Black had explained how to use share prices to calculate the
value of derivatives. The Black-Scholes options-pricing model was more than
a piece of geeky mathematics. It was a manifesto, part of a revolution that
put an end to the anti-intellectualism of American finance and transformed
financial markets from bull rings into today’s quantitative powerhouses.
Yet, in a roundabout way, Black’s approach also led to some of the late
boom’s most disastrous lapses.
Derivatives markets are not new, nor are
they an exclusively Western phenomenon. Mr Merton has described how Osaka’s
Dojima rice market offered forward contracts in the 17th century and
organised futures trading by the 18th century. However, the growth of
derivatives in the 36 years since Black’s formula was published has taken
them from the periphery of financial services to the core.
In “The Partnership”, a history of Goldman
Sachs, Charles Ellis records how the derivatives markets took off. The
International Monetary Market opened in 1972; Congress allowed trade in
commodity options in 1976; S&P 500 futures launched in 1982, and options on
those futures a year later. The Chicago Board Options Exchange traded 911
contracts on April 26th 1973, its first day (and only one month before
Black-Scholes appeared in print). In 2007 the CBOE’s volume of contracts
reached almost 1 trillion.
Trading has exploded partly because
derivatives are useful. After America came off the gold standard in 1971,
businesses wanted a way of protecting themselves against the movements in
exchange rates, just as they sought protection against swings in interest
rates after Paul Volcker, Mr Greenspan’s predecessor as chairman of the Fed,
tackled inflation in the 1980s. Equity options enabled investors to lay off
general risk so that they could concentrate on the specific types of
corporate risk they wanted to trade.
The other force behind the explosion in
derivatives trading was the combination of mathematics and computing. Before
Black-Scholes, option prices had been little more than educated guesses. The
new model showed how to work out an option price from the known price-behaviour
of a share and a bond. It is as if you had a formula for working out the
price of a fruit salad from the prices of the apples and oranges that went
into it, explains Emanuel Derman, a physicist who later took Black’s job at
Goldman. Confidence in pricing gave buyers and sellers the courage to pile
into derivatives. The better that real prices correlate with the unknown
option price, the more confidently you can take on any level of risk. “In a
thirsty world filled with hydrogen and oxygen,” Mr Derman has written,
“someone had finally worked out how to synthesise H2O.”
Poetry in Brownian motion Black-Scholes is
just a model, not a complete description of the world. Every model makes
simplifications, but some of the simplifications in Black-Scholes looked as
if they would matter. For instance, the maths it uses to describe how share
prices move comes from the equations in physics that describe the diffusion
of heat. The idea is that share prices follow some gentle random walk away
from an equilibrium, rather like motes of dust jiggling around in Brownian
motion. In fact, share-price movements are more violent than that.
Over the years the “quants” have found
ways to cope with this—better ways to deal with, as it were, quirks in the
prices of fruit and fruit salad. For a start, you can concentrate on the
short-run volatility of prices, which in some ways tends to behave more like
the Brownian motion that Black imagined. The quants can introduce sudden
jumps or tweak their models to match actual share-price movements more
closely. Mr Derman, who is now a professor at New York’s Columbia University
and a partner at Prisma Capital Partners, a fund of hedge funds, did some of
his best-known work modelling what is called the “volatility smile”—an
anomaly in options markets that first appeared after the 1987 stockmarket
crash when investors would pay extra for protection against another imminent
fall in share prices.
The fixes can make models complex and
unwieldy, confusing traders or deterring them from taking up new ideas.
There is a constant danger that behaviour in the market changes, as it did
after the 1987 crash, or that liquidity suddenly dries up, as it has done in
this crisis. But the quants are usually pragmatic enough to cope. They are
not seeking truth or elegance, just a way of capturing the behaviour of a
market and of linking an unobservable or illiquid price to prices in traded
markets. The limit to the quants’ tinkering has been not mathematics but the
speed, power and cost of computers. Nobody has any use for a model which
takes so long to compute that the markets leave it behind.
The idea behind quantitative finance is to
manage risk. You make money by taking known risks and hedging the rest. And
in this crash foreign-exchange, interest-rate and equity derivatives models
have so far behaved roughly as they should.
A muddle of mortgages Yet the idea behind
modelling got garbled when pools of mortgages were bundled up into
collateralised-debt obligations (CDOs). The principle is simple enough.
Imagine a waterfall of mortgage payments: the AAA investors at the top catch
their share, the next in line take their share from what remains, and so on.
At the bottom are the “equity investors” who get nothing if people default
on their mortgage payments and the money runs out.
Despite theory, CDOs were hopeless, at
least with hindsight (doesn’t that phrase come easily?). The cash flowing
from mortgage payments into a single CDO had to filter up through several
layers. Assets were bundled into a pool, securitised, stuffed into a CDO,
bits of that plugged into the next CDO and so on and on. Each source of a
CDO had interminable pages of its own documentation and conditions, and a
typical CDO might receive income from several hundred sources. It was a
lawyer’s paradise.
This baffling complexity could hardly be
more different from an equity or an interest rate. It made CDOs impossible
to model in anything but the most rudimentary way—all the more so because
each one contained a unique combination of underlying assets. Each CDO would
be sold on the basis of its own scenario, using central assumptions about
the future of interest rates and defaults to “demonstrate” the payouts over,
say, the next 30 years. This central scenario would then be “stress-tested”
to show that the CDO was robust—though oddly the tests did not include a 20%
fall in house prices.
This was modelling at its most feeble.
Derivatives model an unknown price from today’s known market prices. By
contrast, modelling from history is dangerous. There was no guarantee that
the future would be like the past, if only because the American housing
market had never before been buoyed up by a frenzy of CDOs. In any case,
there are not enough past housing data to form a rich statistical picture of
the market—especially if you decide not to include the 1930s nationwide fall
in house prices in your sample.
Neither could the models take account of
falling mortgage-underwriting standards. Mr Rajan of the University of
Chicago says academic research suggests mortgage originators, keen to
automate their procedures, stopped giving potential borrowers lengthy
interviews because they could not easily quantify the firmness of someone’s
handshake or the fixity of their gaze. Such things turned out to be better
predictors of default than credit scores or loan-to-value ratios, but the
investors at the end of a long chain of securities could not monitor lending
decisions.
The issuers of CDOs asked rating agencies
to assess their quality. Although the agencies insist that they did a
thorough job, a senior quant at a large bank says that the agencies’ models
were even less sophisticated than the issuers’. For instance, a BBB tranche
in a CDO might pay out in full if the defaults remained below 6%, and not at
all once they went above 6.5%. That is an all-or-nothing sort of return,
quite different from a BBB corporate bond, say. And yet, because both shared
the same BBB rating, they would be modelled in the same way.
Issuers like to have an edge over the
rating agencies. By paying one for rating the CDOs, some may have laid
themselves open to a conflict of interest. With help from companies like
Codefarm, an outfit from Brighton in Britain that knew the agencies’ models
for corporate CDOs, issuers could build securities with any risk profile
they chose, including those made up from lower-quality ingredients that
would nevertheless win AAA ratings. Codefarm has recently applied for
administration.
There is a saying on Wall Street that the
test of a product is whether clients will buy it. Would they have bought
into CDOs had it not been for the dazzling performance of the quants in
foreign-exchange, interest-rate and equity derivatives? There is every sign
that the issuing banks believed their own sales patter. The banks so liked
CDOs that they held on to a lot of their own issues, even when the idea
behind the business had been to sell them on. They also lent buyers much of
the money to bid for CDOs, certain that the securities were a sound
investment. With CDOs in deep trouble, the lenders are now suffering.
Modern finance is supposed to be all about
measuring risks, yet corporate and mortgage-backed CDOs were a leap in the
dark. According to Mr Derman, with Black-Scholes “you know what you are
assuming when you use the model, and you know exactly what has been swept
out of view, and hence you can think clearly about what you may have
overlooked.” By contrast, with CDOs “you don’t quite know what you are
ignoring, so you don’t know how to adjust for its inadequacies.”
Now that the world has moved far beyond
any of the scenarios that the CDO issuers modelled, investors’ quantitative
grasp of the payouts has fizzled into blank uncertainty. That makes it hard
to put any value on them, driving away possible buyers. The trillion-dollar
bet on mortgages has gone disastrously wrong. The hope is that the
trillion-dollar bet on companies does not end up that way too.
Continued in article
Closing Jensen Comment
So is portfolio diversification theory dead? I hardly think so. But if any
lesson is to be learned is that we should question those critical underlying
assumptions in Plato's Cave before worldwide strategies are implemented that
overlook the Achilles' heel of those critical underlying assumptions.
Accounting History Blast from the Past
Demski, J. S. 1973. The general impossibility of normative accounting
standards. The Accounting Review (October): 718-723. (JSTOR link).
Cushing, B. E. 1977. On the possibility of optimal accounting principles.
The Accounting Review (April): 308-321. (JSTOR
link).
Abstract
Several authors have examined the issue of choice among financial reporting
standards and principles using the framework of rational choice theory.
Their results have been almost uniformly pessimistic in terms of the
possibilities for favorable resolution of this issue. Upon further analysis,
these results are revealed to be an artifact of the way in which the issue
is initially formulated. Several possible methods of reformulating of this
issue within the rational choice framework are proposed and explored in this
paper. The results here support a much more optimistic conclusion and
suggest numerous avenues of further research which could provide
considerable insight into the conditions under which optimal accounting
principles are possible.
Purpose of Theory:
Prediction Versus Explanation
"Higgs ahoy! The elusive boson has probably been found. That is a triumph
for the predictive power of physics," The Economist, February 17, 2012 ---
http://www.economist.com/node/21541825
IN PHYSICS, the trick is often to ask a question so
obvious no one else would have thought of posing it. Apples have fallen to
the ground since time immemorial. It took the genius of Sir Isaac Newton to
ask why. Of course, it helps if you have the mental clout to work out the
answer. Fortunately, Newton did.
It was in this spirit, almost 50 years ago, that a
few insightful physicists asked themselves where mass comes from. Like the
tendency of apples to fall to the ground, the existence of mass is so
quotidian that the idea it needs a formal explanation would never occur to
most people. But it did occur to Peter Higgs, then a young researcher at
Edinburgh University, and to five other scientists whom the quirks of
celebrity have not treated so kindly. They, too, had the necessary mental
clout. They got out their pencils and papers and scribbled down equations
whose upshot was a prediction.
The reason that fundamental particles have mass,
the researchers calculated, is their interaction with a previously unknown
field that permeates space. This field came to be named (with no disrespect
to the losers in the celebrity race) the Higgs field. Technically, it is
needed to explain a phenomenon called electroweak symmetry breaking, which
divides two of the fundamental forces of nature, electromagnetism and the
weak nuclear force. When that division happens, a bit of leftover
mathematics manifests itself as a particle. This putative particle has
become known as the Higgs boson, whose possible discovery was announced to
the world on December 13th (see
article).
Physicists demand a level of proof that would in
any other human activity (including other scientific ones) be seen as
ludicrously high—that a result has only one chance in 3.5m of being wrong.
The new results—from experiments done at CERN, the world’s premier
particle-physics laboratory, using its multi-billion-dollar Large Hadron
Collider, the LHC—do not individually come close to that threshold. What has
excited physicists, though, is that they have got essentially identical
results from two experiments attached to the LHC, which work in completely
different ways. This coincidence makes it much more likely that they have
discovered the real deal.
If they have, it would be a wonderful thing, and
not just for science. Though nations no longer tremble at the feet of
particle physicists—the men, and a few women, who once delivered the
destructive power of the atom bomb—physics still has the power to produce
awe in another way, by revealing the basic truths that underpin reality.
Model behaviour
Finding the Higgs would mark the closing of one
chapter in this story. The elusive boson rounds off what has become known as
the Standard Model of physics—an explanation that relies on 17 fundamental
particles and three physical forces (though it stubbornly refuses to
accommodate a fourth force, gravity, which is separately explained by Albert
Einstein’s general theory of relativity). Much more intriguingly, the Higgs
also opens another chapter of physics.
The physicists’ plan is to use the Standard Model
as the foundation of a larger and more beautiful edifice called
Supersymmetry. This predicts a further set of particles, the heavier
partners of those already found. How much heavier, though, depends on how
heavy the Higgs itself is. The results just announced suggest it is light
enough for some of the predicted supersymmetric particles to be made in the
LHC too.
That is a great relief to those at CERN. If the
Higgs had proved much heavier than this week’s announcement implies they
might have found themselves with a lot of redundant kit on their hands. Now
they can start looking for the bricks of Supersymmetry, to see if it, too,
resembles the physicists’ predictions. In particular, in a crossover between
particle physics and cosmology, they will be trying to find out if (as the
maths suggest) the lightest of the supersymmetric partner particles are the
stuff of the hitherto mysterious “dark matter” whose gravity holds galaxies
together.
A critique of pure reason
One of the most extraordinary things about the
universe is this predictability—that it is possible to write down equations
which describe what is seen, and extrapolate from them to the unseen. Newton
was able to go from the behaviour of bodies falling to Earth to the
mechanism that holds planets in orbit. James Clerk Maxwell’s equations of
electromagnetism, derived in the mid-19th century, predicted the existence
of radio waves. The atom bomb began with Einstein’s famous equation,
E=mc{+2}, which was a result derived by asking how objects would behave when
travelling near the speed of light. The search for antimatter, that staple
of science fiction, was the consequence of an equation about electrons which
has two sets of solutions, one positive and one negative.
Eugene Wigner, one of the physicists responsible
for showing, in the 1920s, the importance of symmetry to the universe (and
who was thus a progenitor of Supersymmetry), described this as the
“unreasonable effectiveness of mathematics”. Not all such predictions come
true, of course. But the predictive power of mathematical physics—as opposed
to the after-the-fact explanatory power of maths in other fields—is still
extraordinary.
Continued in article
Bob Jensen's threads on theory ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm
The Rivals Paul Samuelson and Milton Friedman arrive at the University of
Chicago (in 1932) ---
http://www.economicprincipals.com/issues/2015.07.12/1758.html
Essays on Positive Economics ---
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Essays_in_Positive_Economics
The F-Twist and Purpose of Theory: Prediction Versus Explanation ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#Purpose
The History of Economics & Economic Theory Explained with Comics, Starting
with Adam Smith ---
http://www.openculture.com/2013/12/the-history-of-economics-economic-theory-explained-with-comics.html
This is not a free download ---
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0810988399/ref=as_li_qf_sp_asin_il_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=0810988399&linkCode=as2&tag=openculture-20
. . .
The book covers two (plus) centuries of economic
history. It starts with the Physiocrats, Adam Smith and theoretical
development of capitalism, and then steams ahead into the 19th century,
covering the Industrial Revolution, the rise of big business and big
finance. Next comes the action packed 20th century: the Great Depression,
the New Deal, the threat from Communism during the Cold War, the tax reforms
of the Reagan era, and eventually the crash of 2008 and Occupy Wall Street.
Along the way,
Goodwin and the illustrator
Dan E. Burr demystify the economic theories of
figures like Ricardo, Marx, Malthus, Keynes, Friedman and Hayek — all in a
substantive but approachable way.
As with most treatments of modern economics, the
book starts with Adam Smith. To get a feel for Goodwin’s approach, you can
dive into the first chapter of Economix,
which grapples with Smith’s theories about the free market, division of
labor and the Invisible Hand. Economix can be purchased
online here.
Related Content:
An Introduction to Great Economists — Adam Smith, the Physiocrats & More —
Presented in a Free Online Course
60-Second Adventures in Economics: An Animated Intro to The Invisible
Hand and Other Economic Ideas
Reading Marx’s Capital with David Harvey (Free Course)
Jensen Comment
I ordered a used copy of this book from Amazon. This book is a most interesting
way to learn the history of economics succinctly.
One surprise is that the book has a relatively good index. Another surprise
is that the book has some small sections on my special interest --- derivative
financial instruments and hedging, although these play a miniscule role in the
comic book.
A few interesting quotations are shown below:
Page 17and Page 19
Enter Jean-Baptiste Colbert (1619-1683), who became
the finance minister of France in 1665. He thought money was wealth, end of
story. ... French thinking on economics change. Maybe wealth wasn't a
stockpile of silver like Colbert thought. Maybe wealth
circulated, like blood circultes throght a body. Laws,
regulations, tariffs, subsidies, and so on would get in the way of that
natural circulation.
Page 61
Marx's logic applied to the
Ricardo model and we don't live in that model. (Neither does
Greece)
Page 22and Page 23
Bakers didn't work because some Bread Planner told
them to, or because they were saints who wanted people to be well fed. They
worked because it was good for them ... So in Smith's economy, competition
kept everyone honest. Every baker --- saint or greedhead alike --- was led,
"as if by an invisible hand," to sell bread at fair price, high enough
to pay for the baker costs and work, low enough that others didn't steal the
customers.
Page 183
Way back in the 1920s, the Austrian economists Ludwig
von Mises (1881-1973) and Freederick Hayek (1899-1992) saw economic planning
become political dictatorship in country after country. They saw that when
people lose their economic liberty, they lose their political liberty. ...
Haye especially was a formidable thinker; instead of assuming the
market worked, which economists had be doing since Ricardo, Hayek looked to
how it worked --- how interaction of small units (people) creates a complex
intelligence (the market), which responds to shortages, changes in
taste, or new technologies far better than any human planner can ("invisible
brain" might be a better term than "invisible hand.") . . . People who
try to replace this brain with their own systems will fail, and in
the process of failing, they'll do a lot of dmagbe.
Page 184
Like Hayek, Friedman stressed that concentrated power
is threat to freedom. But he didn't seem to see that power cn
concentrate in more than one form.
Page 185
(Market failure) refers to how --- even
textbook-perfect markets--- can give bad results. for instance, with
externalities which are essentially side effects of economic transactions.
Bad externalities are everywhere, because the people mking decisions aren't
the ones getting hurt. (in mathematical models these externalities
are sometimes called non-convexities).
Page 240
By the 1980s, the
IMF was full of neoliberals. Strure adjustment came down to adopting
neoliberalism. Structural adjustment was hard to refuse; The World Bank,
private lenders, business, the US Treasury, even aid donors would all steer
cler of a country that the IMF was unsound (say what?)
Still, people hated structural adjustment, and
the IMF knew it. So part of the program was protected democracy in which the
economic program was protected from democracy.
Continued in a nice summary of Economix
Added Comment
If you want to learn more about controversial Keynesian economics you might
start with this book.
Monty Hall Paradox Video ---
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mhlc7peGlGg
Monty Hall Paradox Explanation ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monte_Hall_paradox
Jensen Comment
Of course the paradox in real life decision making, that takes it out of the
real of the Monty Hall solutions and game theory in general, is that in the real
world the probabilities of finding what's behind closed doors are unknown.
An alternate solution when probabilities are unknown for paths leading to
closed doors is the Robert Frost solution to choose the door least opened.---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/tidbits/2007/tidbits070905.htm
What the Monty Hall Paradox teaches us, at least symbolically, is that
sometimes the most obvious common sense solutions to problems are not
necessarily optimal. The geniuses in life discover better solutions that most of
would consider absurd at the time --- such as that time is relative and not
absolute ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theory_of_relativity
Richard Sansing forwarded the link
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Principle_of_restricted_choice_(bridge)
Hi Steve and Jagdish,
Buried in the 2011Denver presentation by Greg Waymire is a lament about two of
my hot buttons. Greg mentions the lack of replication (shall we call them
reproductions?) in findings (harvests) published in academic accounting
research journals. Secondly, he mentions the lack of commentary and debate
concerning these these findings. It seems that there's not a whole lot of
interest (debate) about those findings among practitioners or in our academy ---
http://commons.aaahq.org/hives/629d926370/summary
At long last we are making progress in finally getting the attention of the
American Accounting Association leaders regarding how to broaden research
methods and topics of study (beyond financial reporting) in academic accounting
research. The AAA Executive Committee now has annual retreats devoted to this
most serious hole that accountics researchers have dug (Steve calls it a "dig"
in the message from Jagdish) us into over the past four decades.
Change in academic accounting research will come very slowly. Paul Williams
blames the slowness of change on the accountics scientist-conspired monopoly.
I'm less inclined to blame the problem of conspiracy. I think the biggest
problem is that accountics research in capital markets studies is so much easier
since the data is provided like manna from heaven from CRSP, Compustat,
AuditAnalytics, etc. No added scientific effort to collect data is required by
accountics scientists. At CERN, however, physics scientists had to collect
new data to cast doubt on prevailing speed of light theory.
Two years ago, at a meeting, I encountered one of my former students who
eventually entered a leading accounting PhD program and was completing his
dissertation. When I asked him why he was doing a traditional accountics-science
dissertation he admitted that this was much easier than having to collect his
own data.
Now more to the point concerning the messaging of Jagdish and Steve is my
message earlier this week about the physics of economics in general.
Purpose of Theory:
Prediction Versus Explanation
"Milton Friedman's grand illusion," by Mark Buchanan, The Physics
of Finance: A look at economics and finance through the lens of physics,
September 16, 2011 ---
http://physicsoffinance.blogspot.com/2011/09/milton-friedmans-grand-illusion.html
Three years ago I wrote
an Op-Ed for the New York Times on the need for
radical change in the way economists model whole economies. Today's General
Equilibrium models -- and their slightly more sophisticated cousins, Dynamic
Stochastic General Equilibrium models -- make assumptions with no basis in
reality. For example, there is no financial sector in these model economies.
They generally assume that the diversity of behaviour of all an economy's
many firms and consumers can be ignored and simply included as the average
behaviour of a few "representative" agents.
I argued then that it was about time economists started using far more
sophisticated modeling tools, including agent based models, in which the
diversity of interactions among economic agents can be included along with a
financial sector. The idea is to model the simpler behaviours of agents as
well as you can and let the macro-scale complex behaviour of the economy
emerge naturally out of them, without making any restrictive assumptions
about what kinds of things can or cannot happen in the larger economy. This
kind of work is going forward rapidly. For some detail, I recommend
this talk earlier this month by Doyne Farmer.
After that Op-Ed I received quite a number of emails from economists
defending the General Equilibrium approach. Several of them mentioned Milton
Friedman in their defense, saying that he had shown long ago that one
shouldn't worry about the realism of the assumptions in a theory, but only
about the accuracy of its predictions. I eventually found the paper to which
they were referring, a classic in economic history which has exerted a huge
influence over economists over the past half century. I recently re-read the
paper and wanted to make a few comments on Friedman's main argument. It
rests entirely, I think, on a devious or slippery use of words which makes
it possible to give a sensible sounding argument for what is actually a
ridiculous proposition.
The paper is entitled
The Methodology of Positive Economics and was
first published in 1953. It's an interesting paper and enjoyable to read.
Essentially, it seems, Friedman's aim is to argue for scientific standards
for economics akin to those used in physics. He begins by making a clear
definition of what he means by "positive economics," which aims to be free
from any particular ethical position or normative judgments. As he wrote,
positive economics deals with...
"what is," not with "what ought to be." Its task
is to provide a system of generalizations that can be used to make
correct predictions about the consequences of any change in
circumstances. Its performance is to be judged by the precision, scope,
and conformity with experience of the predictions it yields.
Friedman then asks how one should judge the validity
of a hypothesis, and asserts that...
...the only relevant test of the validity of a
hypothesis is comparison of its predictions with experience. The
hypothesis is rejected if its predictions are contradicted ("frequently"
or more often than predictions from an alternative hypothesis); it is
accepted if its predictions are not contradicted; great confidence is
attached to it if it has survived many opportunities for contradiction.
Factual evidence can never "prove" a hypothesis; it can only fail to
disprove it, which is what we generally mean when we say, somewhat
inexactly, that the hypothesis has been "confirmed" by experience."
So far so good. I think most scientists would see the
above as conforming fairly closely to their own conception of how science
should work (and of course this view is closely linked to views made famous
by Karl Popper).
Next step: Friedman goes on to ask how one chooses between several
hypotheses if they are all equally consistent with the available evidence.
Here too his initial observations seem quite sensible:
...there is general agreement that relevant
considerations are suggested by the criteria "simplicity" and
"fruitfulness," themselves notions that defy completely objective
specification. A theory is "simpler" the less the initial knowledge
needed to make a prediction within a given field of phenomena; it is
more "fruitful" the more precise the resulting prediction, the wider the
area within which theory yields predictions, and the more additional
lines for further research it suggests.
Again, right in tune I think with the practice and
views of most scientists. I especially like the final point that part of the
value of a hypothesis also comes from how well it stimulates creative
thinking about further hypotheses and theories. This point is often
overlooked.
Friedman's essay then shifts direction. He argues that the processes and
practices involved in the initial formation of a hypothesis, and in the
testing of that hypothesis, are not as distinct as people often think,
Indeed, this is obviously so. Many scientists form a hypothesis and try to
test it, then adjust the hypothesis slightly in view of the data. There's an
ongoing evolution of the hypothesis in correspondence with the data and the
kinds of experiments of observations which seem interesting.
To this point, Friedman's essay says nothing that wouldn't fit into any
standard discussion of the generally accepted philosophy of science from the
1950s. But this is where it suddenly veers off wildly and attempts to
support a view that is indeed quite radical. Friedman mentions the
difficulty in the social sciences of getting
new evidence with which to test an hypothesis by looking at its
implications. This difficulty, he suggests,
... makes it tempting to suppose that other, more
readily available, evidence is equally relevant to the validity of the
hypothesis-to suppose that hypotheses have not only "implications" but
also "assumptions" and that the conformity of these "assumptions" to
"reality" is a test of the validity of the hypothesis different from or
additional to the test by implications. This widely held view is
fundamentally wrong and productive of much mischief.
Having raised this idea that assumptions are not part
of what should be tested, Friedman then goes on to attack very strongly the
idea that a theory should strive at all to have realistic assumptions.
Indeed, he suggests, a theory is actually superior insofar as its
assumptions are unrealistic:
In so far as a theory can be said to have
"assumptions" at all, and in so far as their "realism" can be judged
independently of the validity of predictions, the relation between the
significance of a theory and the "realism" of its "assumptions" is
almost the opposite of that suggested by the view under criticism. Truly
important and significant hypotheses will be found to have "assumptions"
that are wildly inaccurate descriptive representations of reality, and,
in general, the more significant theory, the more unrealistic the
assumptions... The reason is simple. A hypothesis is important if it
"explains" much by little,... To be important, therefore, a hypothesis
must be descriptively false in its assumptions...
This is the statement that the economists who wrote to
me used to defend unrealistic assumptions in General Equilibrium theories.
Their point was that having unrealistic assumptions isn't just not a
problem, but is a positive strength for a theory. The more unrealistic the
better, as Friedman argued (and apparently proved, in the eyes of some
economists).
Now, what is wrong with Friedman's argument, if anything? I think the key
issue is his use of the provocative terms such as "unrealistic" and "false"
and "inaccurate" in places where he actually means "simplified,"
"approximate" or "incomplete." He switches without warning between these
two different meanings in order to make the conclusion seem unavoidable, and
profound, when in fact it is simply not true, or something we already
believe and hardly profound at all.
To see the problem, take a simple example in physics. Newtonian dynamics
describes the motions of the planets quite accurately (in many cases) even
if the planets are treated as point masses having no extension, no rotation,
no oceans and tides, mountains, trees and so on. The great triumph of
Newtonian dynamics (including his law of gravitational attraction) is it's
simplicity -- it asserts that out of all the many details that could
conceivably influence planetary motion, two (mass and distance) matter most
by far. The atmosphere of the planet doesn't matter much, nor does the
amount of sunlight it reflects. theory of course goes further to
describe how other details do matter if one considers planetary motion in
more detail -- rotation does matter, for example, because it generates tides
which dissipate energy, taking energy slowly away from orbital motion.
But I don't think anyone would be tempted to say that Newtonian dynamics is
a powerful theory because it is descriptively false in its assumptions. It's
assumptions are actually descriptively simple -- that planets and The Sun
have mass, and that a force acts between any two masses in proportion to the
product of their masses and in inverse proportional to the distance between
them. From these assumptions one can work out predictions for details of
planetary motion, and those details turn out to be close to what we see. The
assumptions are simple and plausible, and this is what makes theory so
powerful when it turns out to make powerful and accurate predictions.
Indeed, if those same predictions came out of a theory with obviously false
assumptions -- all planets are perfect cubes, etc. -- it would be less
powerful by far because it would be less believable. It's ability to make
predictions would be as big a mystery as the original phenomenon of
planetary motion itself -- how can a theory that is so obviously not in tune
with reality still make such accurate predictions?
So whenever Friedman says "descriptively false" I think you can instead
write "descriptively simple", and clarify the meaning by adding a phrase of
the sort "which identify the key factors which matter most." Do that
replacement in Friedman's most provocative phrase from above and you have
something far more sensible:
A hypothesis is important if it "explains" much by
little,... To be important, therefore, a hypothesis must be
descriptively simple in its assumptions. It must identify the key
factors which matter most...
That's not quite so bold, however, and it doesn't create a license for
theorists to make any assumptions they want without being criticized if
those assumptions stray very far from reality.Continued in article
Jensen Comment
Especially note the comments at the end of this article.
My favorite is the following:
Herbert Simon (1963) countered Friedman by stating the
purpose of scientific theories is not to make predictions, but to explain
things - predictions are then tests of whether the explanations are correct.
Both Friedman and Simon's views are better directed
to a field other than economics. The data
at some point will always expose the frailest of assumptions; while the lack
of repeatable results supports futility in the explanation of heterogeneous
agents.
That's perceptive. Scientists should just steer clear of economics. Economics
is so complex it is better suited to astrologists.
Also see the following comment"
There are certainly financial theories with patently
false assumptions. For example, the Capital Asset Pricing Model:
> all investors are rational
> all investors have perfect information
> all investors can borrow and lend at the risk-free rate
> all investors can buy and short the market in unlimited quantities
We know none of these assumptions are true. How many of us can borrow at the
risk-free rate? Yet they are some of the assumptions that underlie Nobel
Prize winning theories.
As suggested in the blog, these false assumptions are made because they are
ancillary to the main point of theory, which speaks to asset pricing
being a function of risk vs. return, and how these assets together comprise
portfolios.
For these items the above does not matter.
However, if we were to go about modeling the stock or bond market for a
month to assess our own portfolio, the false assumptions would matter
greatly.
I wrote a brief blog post along similar track a couple months back if you
are interested -
http://treasurycafe.blogspot.com/2011/07/capm-interlude-theory-of-theory.html
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting theory are at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm
You may want to look at Carla Carnagha's slide show entitled
"Strategies for Teaching the Accounting Theory Course:
Curriculum, Pedagogy and Resources"
http://commons.aaahq.org/files/8ba2111d71/AAA_Presentation_final.ppt
Bob Jensen's continuously updated two volumes on accounting theory ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm
Hi Dennis,
I think there's a fundamental choice to make regarding whether to focus on
accounting theory in history versus contemporary accounting theory.
Contemporary accounting theory builds on contemporary theory and contracting in
finance and economics, including such topics as those listed below:
Financial Accounting Theory Extensions of the Following Topics:
Structured Finance ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Structured_finance
Securitization ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Securitization
Portfolio Theory (including the CAPM and Options Pricing) ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portfolio_theory
M&M Theory ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modigliani-Miller_theorem
Financial Instruments ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Financial_instruments
Derivative Financial Instruments ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Derivative_%28finance%29
Other topics listed at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm
The last time I taught a contemporary accounting theory course, the 2006
syllabus was the one at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/acct5341.htm
Managerial and Organizational Accounting Theory Extensions could build on the
following: ---
Great Minds in Management: The Process of Theory Development
---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen//theory/00overview/GreatMinds.htm
Great Minds in Sociology ---
http://www.sociosite.net/topics/sociologists.php
Also see Also see
http://www.sociologyprofessor.com/
Accounting history builds on content of accounting theory articles in the
published leading academic accounting journals such as TAR between the Years
1925 and 1990. After 1990, I think many accounting theory professors shifted
more toward contemporary accounting theory topics. As a result, most previous
accounting theory textbooks became history.
The older style accounting theory courses were often rooted more in philosophy.
For example, you could cherry pick topics from Harry Wolk's 2009 four-volume
set. If course this set is both too extensive and too expensive to serve as a
textbook for a single course.
Capsule Commentary Book Review, The
Accounting Review, January 2012, pp. 356-357 ---
http://aaajournals.org/doi/full/10.2308/accr-10189
CAPSULE COMMENTARY
Stephen A. Zeff, Editor
HARRY I. WOLK (editor), Accounting Theory
(London, U.K.: Sage Publications Ltd., 2009, ISBN 978-1-84787-609-6, pp.
xlv, 1,518 in four volumes) ---
http://www.uk.sagepub.com/books/Book233127?siteId=sage-uk&prodTypes=any&q=Accounting+Theory&fs=1
Harry I. Wolk, the compiler of this collection of
74 previously published articles and other essays, died in October 2009 at
age 79. In 1984, he was assisted by two colleagues in writing a thoughtful,
wide-ranging textbook on accounting theory, which is now in its seventh
edition. He has, thus, been a close student of the accounting theory
literature for many years.
Wolk's valedictory contribution is this anthology,
which is divided into ten sections: philosophical background, accounting
concepts, conceptual frameworks, accounting for changing prices, standard
setting, applications of accounting theory to five measurement areas, agency
theory, principles versus rules, international accounting standards, and
accounting issues in East and Southeast Asia. Because he provides only a
two-and-a-half-page general introduction, we cannot know the criteria he
used to make these selections. The earliest of the articles dates from 1958,
and one infers that this collection represents the body of work that, over
his long career, mostly at Drake University, he found to be influential
writings.
Among the major contributors to theory
literature represented in the collection are Devine, Mattessich, Davidson,
Solomons, Sterling, Thomas, Bell, Shillinglaw, Bedford, Ijiri, and Stamp.
Conspicuous omissions are Chambers, Baxter, Staubus, Moonitz, Sorter, and
Vatter. Although many of the earlier pieces have stood the test of time, a
number of the more recent selections would, inevitably, be open to
second-guessing. To be sure, most of these articles can be accessed
electronically, yet it is instructive to know the works that Harry Wolk
believed were worth remembering, and it is handy to have them all in one
collection.
The price tag of £600/$1,050
for the four-volume set will, unfortunately, deter all but the most
enthusiastic purchasers.
Jensen Comment
And to think my constantly-updated accounting theory book (in two volumes) has a
price tag of $0 (Sigh!)---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm
But I do thank Harry for providing me with an accounting illustration that
I turned into the most popular Excel illustration that I ever authored (i.e.,
popular in the eyes of my students over the years) ---
www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/Excel/wtdcase2a.xls
Table of Contents ---
http://www.uk.sagepub.com/books/Book233127?siteId=sage-uk&prodTypes=any&q=Accounting+Theory&fs=1#tabview=toc
SECTION I: PHILOSOPHICAL BACKGROUND Accounting - A System of Measurement
Rules Devine, Carl Radical Developments in Accounting Thought Chua, Wai Fong
Accounting as a Discipline for Study and Practice Bell, Philip W. Why Can
Accounting Not Become a Science Like Physics? Stamp, Edward Social Reality
and the Measurement of Its Phenomena Mattessich, Richard Toward a Science of
Accounting Sterling, Robert R. Methodological Problems and Preconditions of
a General Theory of Accounting Mattessich, Richard
SECTION II: INFORMALLY DEVELOPED ACCOUNTING CONCEPTS A. Realization and
Recognition The Critical Event and Recognition of Net Profit Myers, John
Recognition Requirements - Income Earned and Realized Devine, Carl The
Realization Concept Davidson, Sidney B. Matching Cash Movements and Periodic
Income Determination Storey, Reed Some Impossibilities - Including
Allocations Devine, Carl The FASB and the Allocation Fallacy Thomas, Arthur
Conservatism Conservatism in Accounting, Part I: Explanation and
Implications Watts, Ross Conservatism in Accounting, Part II: Evidence and
Research Opportunities Watts, Ross The Changing Time-Series Properties
ofEarnings, Cash Flows, and Accruals: Has Financial Accounting Become Mor
Conservative? Givoly, Dan and Carla Hayn D. Disclosure Information
Disclosure Strategy Lev, Baruch Corporate Reporting and the Accounting
Profession: An Interpretive Paradigm Ogan, Pekin and David Ziebart Financial
Reporting in India: Changes in Disclosure over the Period 1982-1990 Marston,
C. L. and P. Robson Corporate Mandatory Disclosure Practices in Bangladesh
M. Akhtaruddin Corporate Governance and Voluntary Disclosure L.L. Eng and
Y.T. Mak Ownership Structure and Voluntary Disclosure in Hong Kong and
Singapore Chau, Gerald and Sidney Gray E. Uniformity Uniformity Versus
Flexibility: A Review of the Rhetoric Keller, Thomas Differences in
Circumstances!: Fact or Fancy Cadenhead, Gary Toward the Harmonization of
Accounting Standards: An Analytical Framework Wolk, Harry and Patrick
Heaston
SECTION III: CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORKS FASB's Statements on Objectives and
Elements of Financial Accounting: A Review Dopuch, Nicholas and Shyam Sunder
The FASB's Conceptual Framework: An Evaluation Solomons, David The Evolution
of the Conceptual Framework for Business Enterprises in the United States
Zeff, Stephen Criteria for Choosing an Accounting Model Solomons, David
Objectives of Financial Reporting Walker, R.G. Reliability and Objectivity
of Accounting Methods Ijiri, Yuji and Robert Jaedicke
SECTION IV: ACCOUNTING FOR CHANGING PRICES Replacement Cost: Member of
the Family, Welcome Guest, or Intruder? Zeff, Stephen Costs (Historical
versus Current) versus Exit Values Sterling, Robert R. A Defense for
Historical Cost Accounting Ijiri, Yuji The Case for Financial Capital
Maintenance Carsberg, Bryan Income and Value Determination and Changing
Price Levels: An Essay Towards a Theory Stamp, Edward
SECTION V: ACCOUNTING STANDARDS AND FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Get it off the
Balance Sheet! Dieter, Richard and Arthur Wyatt Political Lobbying on
Proposed Standards: A Challenge to the IASB Zeff, Stephen A Review of the
Earnings Management Literature and Its Implications for Standard Setting
Healy, Paul and James Wahlen Relationships among Income Measurements
Bedford, Norton Some Basic Concepts of Accounting and Their Implications
Lorig, Arthur Economic Impact of Accounting Standards - Implications for the
FASB Rappaport, Alfred An Analysis of Factors Affecting the Adoption of
International Accounting Standards by Developing Countries Zeghal, Daniel
and Kerim Mhedhbi The Relevance of IFRS to a Developing Country: Evidence
from Kazakhstan Tyrrall, David, David Woodward and A. Rakhumbekova Political
Influence and Coexistence of a Uniform Accounting System and Accounting
Standards: Recent Developments in China Xiao, Jason, Pauline Weetman and
Manli Sun
SECTION VI: APPLIED ACCOUNTING THEORY A. Income Tax Allocation
Comprehensive Tax Allocation: Let's Stop Taking Some Misconceptions for
Granted Milburn, Alex Acccelerated Depreciation and the Allocation of Income
Taxes Davidson, Sidney Discounting Deferred Tax Liabilities pp. 655-665
Nurnberg, Hugo B. Leases Lease Capitalization and the Transaction Concept
Rappaport, Alfred Leasing and Financial Statements Shillinglaw, Gordon
Accounting for Leases - A New Framework McGregor, Warren C. Pensions and
Other Postretirement Liabilities Alternative Accounting Treatments for
Pensions Schipper, Katherine and Roman Weil A Conceptual Framework Analysis
of Pension and Other Postretirement Benefit Accounting Wolk, Harry and Terri
Vaughan OPEB: Improved Reporting or the Last Straw Thomas, Paula and Larry
Farmer D. Consolidations An Examination of Financial Reporting Alternatives
for Associated Enterprises King, Thomas and Valdean Lembke Valuation for
Financial Reporting: Intangible Assets, Goodwill, and Impairment Analysis
and SFAS 141 and 142 Mard, Michael, James Hitchner, Steven Hyden and Mark
Zyla Proportionate Consolidation and Financial Analysis Bierman, Harold The
Evolution of Consolidated Financial Reporting in Australia Whittred, Greg
Foreign Currency Translation Research: Review and Synthesis Houston, Carol
The Implementation of SFAS Number 52: Did the Functional Currency Approach
Prevail? Kirsch, Robert and Thomas Evans Financial Accounting Developments
in the European Union: Past Events and Future Prospects Haller, Axel E.
Intangibles Accounting for Research and Development Costs Bierman, Harold
and Roland Dukes The Boundaries of Financial Accounting and How to Extend
Them Lev, Baruch and Paul Zarowin The Capitalization, Amortization, and
Value Added Relevance of R & D Lev, Baruch and Theodore Sougiannis
Accounting for Brands in France and Germany Compared With IAS 38 (Intangible
Assets: An Illustration of the Difficulty of International Harmonization)
Stolowy, Herve, Axel Haller and Volker Klockhaus Accounting for Intangible
Assets in Scandinavia, the U.K., and U.S. and the IASB: Challenges and a
Solution Hoeg-Krohn, Niels and Kjell Knivsfla
SECTION VII: POSITIVE ACCOUNTING THEORY The Methodology of Positive
Accounting Christenson, Charles Positive Accounting Theory: A Ten Year
Perspective Watts, Ross and Jerrold Zimmerman Positive Accounting Theory and
the PA Cult Chambers, Raymond Accounting and Policy Choice and Firm
Characteristics in the Asia-Pacific Region: an International Empirical Test
of Costly Contracting Theory Astami, Emita and Greg Tower
SECTION VIII: THE TRUE AND FAIR VIEW AND PRINCIPLES VERSUS RULES-BASED
STANDARDS Principles Versus Rules-Based Accounting Standards: The FASB's
Standard Setting Strategy Benston, George, Michael Bromwich and Alfred
Wagenhofer The True and Fair View in British Accounting Walton, Peter A
European True and Fair View Alexander, David Rules, Principles, and
Judgments in Accounting Standards Bennett, Bruce, Helen Prangell and Michael
Bradbury
SECTION IX: INTERNATIONAL ACCOUNTING AND CONVERGENCE The Introduction of
International Accounting Standards in Europe: Implications for International
Convergence Schipper, Katherine The Adoption of International Accounting
Standards in the European Union pp. 127-153 Whittington, Geoffrey Trends in
Research on International Accounting Harmonization pp. 272-304 Baker, C.
Richard and Elena Barbou The Quest for International Accounting
Harmonization: A Review of the Standard- Setting Agendas of the IASC, US,
UK, Canada and Australia, 1973-1997 Street, Donna and Kimberly Shaughnessy
From National to Global Accounting and Reporting Standards McKee, David, Don
Garner and Yosra AbuAmara McKee A Statistical Model of International
Accounting Harmonization pp. 1-29 Archer, Simon, Pascal, Delvaille and
Stuart McLeay
SECTION X: OTHER NATIONAL AND REGIONAL ACCOUNTING STUDIES The
Institutional Environment of Financial Reporting Regulation in ASEAN
Countries Saudogaran, Sharokh and J. Diga Corporate Financial Reporting and
Regulation in Japan Benston, George, Michael Bromwich, Robert Litan and
Alfred Wagenhofer Accounting Theory in the Political Economy of China Shuie,
Fujing and Joseph Hilmy Ownership Structure and Earnings Informativeness:
Evidence from Korea Jung, Kooyul and Kwon Soo Young Accounting Developments
in Pakistan Ashraf, Junaid and WaQar Ghani Accounting Theory in the
Political Economy of China Shuie, Fujing and Joseph Hilmy Ownership
Structure and Earnings Informativeness: Evidence from Korea Jung, Kooyul and
Kwon Soo Young Corporate Ownership and Governments in Russia Krivogorsky,
Victoria Accounting Developments in Pakistan
Jensen Comment
I have not yet read this book, although it is on order. The table of contents is
certainly very comprehensive. When I get the book I anticipate some major
strenghts (e.g., history) and some major weaknesses such as superficial coverage
of XBRL and financial instruments accounting, particularly derivative financial
instruments and hedging activities.
One problem with this book is bad timing. It has copyright date of 2009, but
most of the modules were written much earlier before major happenings in
accounting standard setting such as new standards and interpretations (domestic
and international) on leases, revenue recognition, consolidations, fair value
accounting, and hedging.
I think the book will also be weak in the following critical areas of my own
free accounting theory online book ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm
Respectfully,
Bob Jensen
Research at the University of Rochester ---
https://urresearch.rochester.edu/home.action
Jensen Comment
Note that this site includes a long listing of research in accounting, finance,
and economics, much of it based on positivism and financial markets.
2012 AAA Meeting Plenary
Speakers and Response Panel Videos ---
http://commons.aaahq.org/hives/20a292d7e9/summary
I think you have to be a an AAA member and log into the AAA Commons to view
these videos.
Bob Jensen is an obscure speaker following the handsome Rob Bloomfield
in the 1.02 Deirdre McCloskey Follow-up Panel—Video ---
http://commons.aaahq.org/posts/a0be33f7fc
My
threads on Deidre McCloskey and my own talk are at
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/temp/DeirdreMcCloskey/StatisticalSignificance01.htm
September 13, 2012 reply
from Jagdish Gangolly
Bob,
Thanks you so much for posting this.
What a wonderful speaker Deidre McCloskey! Reminded
me of JR Hicks who also was a stammerer. For an economist, I was amazed by
her deep and remarkable understanding of statistics.
It was nice to hear about Gossett, perhaps the only
human being who got along well with both Karl Pearson and R.A. Fisher,
getting along with the latter itself a Herculean feat.
Gosset was helped in the mathematical derivation of
small sample theory by Karl Pearson, he did not appreciate its importance,
it was left to his nemesis R.A. Fisher. It is remarkable that he could work
with these two giants who couldn't stand each other.
In later life Fisher and Gosset parted ways in that
Fisher was a proponent of randomization of experiments while Gosset was a
proponent of systematic planning of experiments and in fact proved
decisively that balanced designs are more precise, powerful and efficient
compared with Fisher's randomized experiments (see
http://sites.roosevelt.edu/sziliak/files/2012/02/William-S-Gosset-and-Experimental-Statistics-Ziliak-JWE-2011.pdf
)
I remember my father (who designed experiments in
horticulture for a living) telling me the virtues of balanced designs at the
same time my professors in school were extolling the virtues of
randomisation.
In Gosset we also find seeds of Bayesian thinking
in his writings.
While I have always had a great regard for Fisher
(visit to the tree he planted at the Indian Statistical Institute in
Calcutta was for me more of a pilgrimage), I think his influence on the
development of statistics was less than ideal.
Regards,
Jagdish
Jagdish S. Gangolly
Department of Informatics College of Computing & Information
State University of New York at Albany
Harriman Campus, Building 7A, Suite 220
Albany, NY 12222 Phone: 518-956-8251, Fax: 518-956-8247
Hi Jagdish,
You're one of the few people who can really appreciate Deidre's scholarship in
history, economics, and statistics. When she stumbled for what seemed like
forever trying to get a word out, it helped afterwards when trying to remember
that word.
Interestingly, two Nobel economists slugged out the very essence of theory some
years back. Herb Simon insisted that the purpose of theory was to explain.
Milton Friedman went off on the F-Twist tangent saying that it was enough if a
theory merely predicted. I lost some (certainly not all) respect for Friedman
over this. Deidre, who knew Milton, claims that deep in his heart, Milton did
not ultimately believe this to the degree that it is attributed to him. Of
course Deidre herself is not a great admirer of Neyman, Savage, or Fisher.
Friedman's essay
"The
Methodology of Positive Economics" (1953) provided
the
epistemological pattern for his own subsequent
research and to a degree that of the Chicago School. There he argued that
economics as science should be free of value judgments for it to be
objective. Moreover, a useful economic theory should be judged not by its
descriptive realism but by its simplicity and fruitfulness as an engine of
prediction. That is, students should measure the accuracy of its
predictions, rather than the 'soundness of its assumptions'. His argument
was part of an ongoing debate among such statisticians as
Jerzy Neyman,
Leonard Savage, and
Ronald Fisher.
.
"The Effect of Information on Uncertainty and the Cost of Capital,"
David James Johnstone, University of Sydney, July 31, 2014 ---
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2474950
Abstract:
It is widely held that better financial reporting
makes investors more confident in their predictions of future cash flows
and reduces their required risk premia. The logic is that more
information leads necessarily to more certainty, and hence lower
subjective estimates of firm "beta" or covariance with other firms. This
is misleading on both counts. Bayesian
logic shows that the best available information can often leave decision
makers less certain about future events.
And for those cases where information indeed brings great certainty,
conventional mean-variance asset pricing models imply that more certain
estimates of future cash payoffs can sometimes bring a higher cost of
capital. This occurs when new or better information leads to
sufficiently reduced expected firm payoffs. To properly understand the
effect of signal quality on the cost of capital, it is essential to
think of what that information says, rather than considering merely its
"precision", or how strongly it says what it says.
Implications of Bad Auditing on Capital Markets and Client's Cost of
Capital (Bayesian, Bayes)
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudConclusion.htm#IncompetentAudits
"Milton Friedman's grand illusion," by Mark Buchanan, The
Physics of Finance: A look at economics and finance through the lens of physics,
September 16, 2011 ---
http://physicsoffinance.blogspot.com/2011/09/milton-friedmans-grand-illusion.html
Many of us on the AECM are not great admirers of positive economics ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#PostPositiveThinking
Everyone
is entitled to their own opinion, but not their own facts.
Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan --- FactCheck.org ---
http://www.factcheck.org/
Then again, maybe we're all
entitled to our own facts!
"The Power of Postpositive
Thinking," Scott McLemee,
Inside Higher Ed, August 2, 2006 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2006/08/02/mclemee
In particular,
a dominant trend in critical theory was the rejection of the concept of
objectivity as something that rests on a more or less naive
epistemology: a simple belief that “facts” exist in some pristine state
untouched by “theory.” To avoid being naive, the dutiful student learned
to insist that, after all, all facts come to us embedded in various
assumptions about the world. Hence (ta da!) “objectivity” exists only
within an agreed-upon framework. It is relative to that framework. So it
isn’t really objective....
What Mohanty
found in his readings of the philosophy of science were much less naïve,
and more robust, conceptions of objectivity than the straw men being
thrashed by young Foucauldians at the time. We are not all prisoners of
our paradigms. Some theoretical frameworks permit the discovery of new
facts and the testing of interpretations or hypotheses. Others do not.
In short, objectivity is a possibility and a goal — not just in the
natural sciences, but for social inquiry and humanistic research as
well.
Mohanty’s major
theoretical statement on PPR arrived in 1997 with Literary Theory and
the Claims of History: Postmodernism, Objectivity, Multicultural
Politics (Cornell University Press). Because poststructurally
inspired notions of cultural relativism are usually understood to be
left wing in intention, there is often a tendency to assume that
hard-edged notions of objectivity must have conservative implications.
But Mohanty’s work went very much against the current.
“Since the
lowest common principle of evaluation is all that I can invoke,” wrote
Mohanty, complaining about certain strains of multicultural relativism,
“I cannot — and consequently need not — think about how your space
impinges on mine or how my history is defined together with yours. If
that is the case, I may have started by declaring a pious political
wish, but I end up denying that I need to take you seriously.”
PPR did
not require throwing out the multicultural baby with the relativist
bathwater, however. It meant developing ways to think about cultural
identity and its discontents. A number of Mohanty’s students and
scholarly colleagues have pursued the implications of postpositive
identity politics.
I’ve written elsewhere
about Moya, an associate professor of English at Stanford University who
has played an important role in developing PPR ideas about identity. And
one academic critic has written
an interesting review essay
on early postpositive scholarship — highly recommended for anyone with a
hankering for more cultural theory right about now.
Not everybody
with a sophisticated epistemological critique manages to turn it into a
functioning think tank — which is what started to happen when people in
the postpositive circle started organizing the first Future of Minority
Studies meetings at Cornell and Stanford in 2000. Others followed at the
University of Michigan and at the University of Wisconsin in Madison.
Two years ago FMS applied for a grant from Mellon Foundation, receiving
$350,000 to create a series of programs for graduate students and junior
faculty from minority backgrounds.
The FMS Summer
Institute, first held in 2005, is a two-week seminar with about a dozen
participants — most of them ABD or just starting their first
tenure-track jobs. The institute is followed by a much larger colloquium
(the part I got to attend last week). As schools of thought in the
humanities go, the postpositivists are remarkably light on the in-group
jargon. Someone emerging from the Institute does not, it seems, need a
translator to be understood by the uninitated. Nor was there a dominant
theme at the various panels I heard.
Rather, the
distinctive quality of FMS discourse seems to derive from a certain very
clear, but largely unstated, assumption: It can be useful for scholars
concerned with issues particular to one group to listen to the research
being done on problems pertaining to other groups.
That sounds
pretty simple. But there is rather more behind it than the belief that
we should all just try to get along. Diversity (of background, of
experience, of disciplinary formation) is not something that exists
alongside or in addition to whatever happens in the “real world.” It is
an inescapable and enabling condition of life in a more or less
democratic society. And anyone who wants it to become more democratic,
rather than less, has an interest in learning to understand both its
inequities and how other people are affected by them.
A case in point
might be the findings discussed by Claude Steele, a professor of
psychology at Stanford, in a panel on Friday. His paper reviewed some of
the research on “identity contingencies,” meaning “things you have to
deal with because of your social identity.” One such contingency is what
he called “stereotype threat” — a situation in which an individual
becomes aware of the risk that what you are doing will confirm some
established negative quality associated with your group. And in keeping
with the threat, there is a tendency to become vigilant and defensive.
Steele did not
just have a string of concepts to put up on PowerPoint. He had research
findings on how stereotype threat can affect education. The most
striking involved results from a puzzle-solving test given to groups of
white and black students. When the test was described as a game, the
scores for the black students were excellent — conspicuously higher, in
fact, than the scores of white students. But in experiments where the
very same puzzle was described as an intelligence test, the results were
reversed. The black kids scores dropped by about half, while the graph
for their white peers spiked.
The only
variable? How the puzzle was framed — with distracting thoughts about
African-American performance on IQ tests creating “stereotype threat” in
a way that game-playing did not.
Steele also
cited an experiment in which white engineering students were given a
mathematics test. Just beforehand, some groups were told that Asian
students usually did really well on this particular test. Others were
simply handed the test without comment. Students who heard about their
Asian competitors tended to get much lower scores than the control
group.
Extrapolate
from the social psychologist’s experiments with the effect of a few
innocent-sounding remarks — and imagine the cumulative effect of more
overt forms of domination. The picture is one of a culture that is
profoundly wasteful, even destructive, of the best abilities of many of
its members.
“It’s not easy
for minority folks to discuss these things,” Satya Mohanty told me on
the final day of the colloquium. “But I don’t think we can afford to
wait until it becomes comfortable to start thinking about them. Our
future depends on it. By ‘our’ I mean everyone’s future. How we enrich
and deepen our democratic society and institutions depends on the
answers we come up with now.”
Earlier this year, Oxford
University Press published a major new work on postpositivist theory,
Visible Identities: Race, Gender, and the Self,by Linda Martin
Alcoff, a professor of philosophy at Syracuse University. Several essays
from the book are available at
the author’s
Web site.
Special Notice:
Accounting Scholarship that Advances Professional Knowledge and Practice
Robert S. Kaplan
The Accounting Review, March 2011, Volume 86, Issue 2,
Recent accounting scholarship has
used statistical analysis on asset prices, financial reports and
disclosures, laboratory experiments, and surveys of practice. The research
has studied the interface among accounting information, capital markets,
standard setters, and financial analysts and how managers make accounting
choices. But as accounting scholars have focused on understanding how
markets and users process accounting data, they have distanced themselves
from the accounting process itself. Accounting scholarship has failed to
address important measurement and valuation issues that have arisen in the
past 40 years of practice. This gap is illustrated with missed opportunities
in risk measurement and management and the estimation of the fair value of
complex financial securities. This commentary encourages accounting scholars
to devote more resources to obtaining a fundamental understanding of
contemporary and future practice and how analytic tools and contemporary
advances in accounting and related disciplines can be deployed to improve
the professional practice of accounting. ©2010 AAA
The videos of the three plenary speakers at the 2010 Annual Meetings in San
Francisco are now linked at
http://commons.aaahq.org/hives/531d5280c3/posts?postTypeName=session+video
I think the video is only available to AAA members.
Although all three
speakers provided inspirational presentations, Steve Zeff and I both
concluded that Bob Kaplan’s presentation was possibly the best that we had
ever viewed among all past AAA plenary sessions. And we’ve seen a lot of
plenary sessions in our long professional careers.
Now that Kaplan’s video is
available I cannot overstress the importance that accounting educators and
researchers watch the video of Bob Kaplan's August 4, 2010 plenary
presentation
http://commons.aaahq.org/hives/531d5280c3/posts?postTypeName=session+video
Don’t miss the history map of Africa analogy to academic accounting
research!!!!!
This dovetails with my Web document at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/TheoryTAR.htm
Also see (slow loading)
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#WhatWentWrong
Trivia Questions
1. Why did Bob wish he’d worn a different color suit?
2. What does JAE stand
for besides the Journal of Accounting and Economics?
Note that to watch the entire Kaplan video ---
http://commons.aaahq.org/hives/531d5280c3/posts?postTypeName=session+video
I think the video is only available to AAA members.
PS
I think Bob Kaplan overstates the value of the academic valuation models in
leading accounting research journals, at least he overvalues their
importance to our practicing profession.
September 9, 2011 reply from Paul Williams
Bob,
I have avoided chiming in on this thread; have gone down this same road and
it is a cul-de-sac. But I want to say that this line of argument is a
clever one. The answer to your rhetorical question is, No, they aren't
more ethical than other "scientists." As you tout the Kaplan
speech I would add the caution that before he raised the issue of practice,
he still had to praise the accomplishments of "accountics" research by
claiming numerous times that this research has led us to greater
understanding about analysts, markets, info. content, contracting, etc.
However, none of that is actually true. As a panelist at the AAA
meeting I juxtaposed Kaplan's praise for what accountics research has taught
us with Paul Krugman's observations about Larry Summer's 1999 observation
that GAAP is what makes US capital markets so stable and efficient. Of
course, as Krugman noted, none of that turned out to be true. And if
that isn't true, then Kaplan's assessment of accountics research isn't
credible, either. If we actually did understand what he claimed we now
understand much better than we did before, the financial crisis of 2008
(still ongoing) would not have happened. The title of my talk was (the
panel was organized by Cheryl McWatters) "The Epistemology of
Ignorance." An obsessive preoccupation with method could be a choice not to
understand certain things-- a choice to rigorously understand things as you
already think they are or want so desperately to continue to believe for
reasons other than scientific ones.
Paul
Gaming for Tenure as an Accounting Professor ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/TheoryTenure.htm
(with a reply about tenure publication point systems from Linda Kidwell)
"So you want to get a Ph.D.?" by David Wood, BYU ---
http://www.byuaccounting.net/mediawiki/index.php?title=So_you_want_to_get_a_Ph.D.%3F
Do You Want to Teach? ---
http://financialexecutives.blogspot.com/2009/05/do-you-want-to-teach.html
Jensen Comment
Here are some added positives and negatives to consider, especially if you are
currently a practicing accountant considering becoming a professor.
Accountancy Doctoral Program Information from Jim Hasselback ---
http://www.jrhasselback.com/AtgDoctInfo.html
Why must all accounting doctoral programs be social science
(particularly econometrics) "accountics" doctoral programs?
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#DoctoralPrograms
Advice and Bibliography for Accounting Ph.D. Students and New Faculty by
James Martin ---
http://maaw.info/AdviceforAccountingPhDstudentsMain.htm
"So you want to get a Ph.D.?" by David Wood, BYU ---
http://www.byuaccounting.net/mediawiki/index.php?title=So_you_want_to_get_a_Ph.D.%3F
Why accountancy doctoral programs are drying up and why accountancy is
no longer
required for admission or graduation in an accountancy doctoral program ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#DoctoralPrograms
Bob Jensen's threads on what went wrong with "accountics research" can be
found at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#WhatWentWrong
What went wrong in accounting/accountics research?
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#WhatWentWrong
AN ANALYSIS OF THE EVOLUTION OF RESEARCH
CONTRIBUTIONS BY THE ACCOUNTING REVIEW: 1926-2005 ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/395wpTAR/Web/TAR395wp.htm#_msocom_1
Systemic problems of accountancy (especially the
vegetable nutrition paradox) that probably will never be solved ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudConclusion.htm#BadNews
AN ANALYSIS OF THE EVOLUTION OF RESEARCH
CONTRIBUTIONS BY THE ACCOUNTING REVIEW: 1926-2005 ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/395wpTAR/Web/TAR395wp.htm#_msocom_1
Systemic problems of accountancy (especially the
vegetable nutrition paradox) that probably will never be solved ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudConclusion.htm#BadNews
"The
Accounting Doctoral Shortage: Time for a New Model,"
by Neal Mero, Jan R. Williams and George W. Krull, Jr. .
Issues in Accounting Education 24 (4)
http://aaapubs.aip.org/getabs/servlet/GetabsServlet?prog=normal&id=IAEXXX000024000004000427000001&idtype=cvips&gifs=Yes&ref=no
ABSTRACT:
The crisis in supply versus demand for doctorally qualified faculty members in
accounting is well documented (Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of
Business [AACSB] 2003a, 2003b; Plumlee et al. 2005; Leslie 2008). Little
progress has been made in addressing this serious challenge facing the
accounting academic community and the accounting profession. Faculty time,
institutional incentives, the doctoral model itself, and research diversity are
noted as major challenges to making progress on this issue. The authors propose
six recommendations, including a new, extramurally funded research program aimed
at supporting doctoral students that functions similar to research programs
supported by such organizations as the National Science Foundation and other
science-based funding sources. The goal is to create capacity, improve
structures for doctoral programs, and provide incentives to enhance doctoral
enrollments. This should lead to an increased supply of graduates while also
enhancing and supporting broad-based research outcomes across the accounting
landscape, including auditing and tax. ©2009 American Accounting Association
Bob
Jensen's threads on accountancy doctoral programs are at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#DoctoralPrograms
Some Things You Might Want to Know About the Wolfram Alpha (WA) Search Engine:
The Good and The Evil
as Applied to Learning Curves (Cumulative Average vs. Incremental Unit)
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theorylearningcurves.htm
The quick and dirty answer to your question Marc is that the present
dominance of accountics scientists behind a wall of silence on our Commons is
just not sustainable. They cannot continue to monopolize AACSB accounting
doctoral programs by limiting supply so drastically in the face of rising demand
for accounting faculty ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#DoctoralPrograms
They cannot continue to monopolize the selection of editors of their favored
journals (especially TAR and AH) in the face of increasing democracy in the AAA.
The Emperor cannot continue to parade without any clothes in the presence of
increasing criticism from AAA Presidents, including criticisms raised by
President Waymire (
who's an accountics
scientist ) in the 2011 Annual Meetings ---
Watch the Video:
http://commons.aaahq.org/posts/b60c7234c6
What we cannot do is expect change to happen overnight. For the past four
decades our doctoral programs have cranked out virtually nothing but accountics
scientists. Something similar happened in the Pentagon in the 1920s when West
Point and Naval Academy graduates dominated the higher command until the 1940s.
We began to see the value of air power, but it took decades to split the Air
Force out from under the Army and to create an Air Force Academy. More
importantly Pentagon budgets began to shift more and more to air power in both
the Air Force and the Naval Air Force.
It's been a long and frustrating fight in the AAA dating back to Bob Anthony
when it was beginning to dawn on genuine accountants that we had created an
accountics scientist monster.
I don't know if you were present when Bob Anthony gave his 1989 Outstanding
Educator Award Address to the American Accounting Association. It was one of the
harshest indictments I've ever heard concerning the sad state of academic
research in serving the accounting profession. Bob never held back on his
punches.
We built the most formidable military in the world by adapting to changes and
innovations. Eventually the Luddite accountics scientists will own up to the
fact they never did become real scientists and that their research methods and
models are just too limited and out of date. His colleague at Harvard, Bob
Kaplan, now carries on the laments of Bob Anthony.
Now that Kaplan’s video is available I cannot overstress the importance that
accounting educators and researchers watch the video of Bob Kaplan's August 4,
2010 plenary presentation
http://commons.aaahq.org/hives/531d5280c3/posts?postTypeName=session+video
Don’t miss the history map of Africa analogy to academic accounting
research!!!!!
The accountics scientist monopoly of our doctoral programs is just not a
sustainable model. But don't expect miracles overnight. For 40 years our
accounting doctoral graduates have never learned any research methods other than
those analytical and inference models favored by accountics scientists.
Respectfully,
Bob Jensen
On September 13, 2010 The Wall Street Journal issued
rankings of the “25 Best” college accounting education programs.
In May 2010 Bloomberg/Business Week issued its
rankings of the “111 Best” college accounting education programs.
In an IAE paper, Wood et al. issues its rankings of
the best college accounting research programs.
Issues in Accounting Education, November 2010, Volume 25, Issue 4,
pp. 613-xv
Also see
http://www.byuaccounting.net/rankings/univrank/rankings.php
My tidbit comparing the rankings of these great accounting
education programs is at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/TheoryRankings.htm
Although I will not dwell on details here,
practitioners are generally interested in clever discoveries of how to make
computer software, XBRL, Google Wave, cloud computing, computer gadgets, cloud computing, pattern recognition,
data visualization, and many other technology innovations relative to the
practice of accountancy. For example, I've attempted (thus far unsuccessfully)
to discover useful ways of visualizing multi-dimensional accounting variables
(including Chernoff faces) ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/352wpvisual/000datavisualization.htm
Alas, I'm a failure, along with most academic accounting researchers, as an applied researcher thus far in life. My leading journal publications, like
other leading accounting research publications, have mostly been irrelevant "accountics" contributions ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/resume.htm#Published
Not everything that can be counted, counts. And not
everything that counts can be counted.
Albert Einstein
For a long time, elite accounting
researchers could find no “empirical evidence” of widespread earnings
management. All they had to do was look up from the computers where their heads
were buried.
Bob Jensen ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/395wpTAR/Web/TAR395wp.htm
“Research should be problem driven rather than
methodologically driven," said Lisa Garcia Bedolla, a member of the task force
who teaches at the University of California at Berkeley.
Scott Jascik ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2009/09/04/polisci
"I understand your point, Jim." He could not identify one issue that
(accountics)
researchers had been able to "put to bed" after
all that effort.
P. Kothari, one of the Editors of JAE and a full professor at MIT,
as quoted by Jim Peters below.
Do we forecast? You bet. Do we have
confidence in our forecasts? Never! Confidence about a non-linear chaotic system
can only come in degrees, and even those degrees of confidence are guesses. Not
all hope is lost. There are times when it seems our ability to predict is better
than others. Thus we need to take advantage of it if we see it. Trading ranges,
pivot points, support and resistance, and the like can help, and do help the
trader.
Michael Covel, Trading Black Swans,
September 2009 ---
http://www.michaelcovel.com/pdfs/swan.pdf
The second is the comment that Joan Robinson made
about American Keynsians: that their theories were so flimsy that they had to
put math into them. In accounting academia, the shortest path to respectability
seems to be to use math (and statistics), whether meaningful or not.
Professor Jagdish Gangolly, SUNY
Albany
American Economist and Nobel Prize Winning Paul Samuelson died on December
13, 2009 ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Samuelson
Among many other things, his textbook was perhaps the all-time best selling
economics textbook. Students in my generation were weaned on Samuelson who, in
my viewpoint, was a fence sitter, albeit a scholarly fence sitter, with respect
to economic theory. He was a mathematician with hundreds of scholarly papers in
his craft.
Stanislaw Ulam once challenged Samuelson to name
one theory in all of the social sciences which is both true and nontrivial.
Several years later, Samuelson responded with
David Ricardo's theory of
comparative advantage: That it is logically true
need not be argued before a mathematician; that is not trivial is attested
by the thousands of important and intelligent men who have never been able
to grasp the doctrine for themselves or to believe it after it was explained
to them.
Probably be an accountant. I like to
figure out stuff. In accounting, if you miss one number you get the whole thing
wrong. You have to be perfect --- I'm a perfectionist.
Giovani Soto (catcher for the Chicago
Cubs when asked what he'd like to be if he wasn't in professional baseball), as
quoted in an interview with Mary Burns in Sports Illustrated, June
2008
Jensen Comment
If Soto only knew that accountants are second only to economists in terms of
inaccuracies. When accountants total up the numbers on a balance sheet the total
is always accurate, but the numbers being added up can be off by 1000% or more.
Accuracy varies of course. Cash counts are highly accurate. Fixed assets, net of
depreciation, are make-pretend within limits. Intangible asset valuations are
about as accurate as ground eyesight measurements of floating cloud dimensions
on a windy day. Accountants make highly inaccurate estimates of assets,
liabilities, and equities. Then accountants change hats and chairs and add these
estimates up very accurately and pretend that the total must mean something ---
but accountants aren't sure what.
If
Soto wants accuracy perhaps he should become a baseball statistician collecting
up subjective estimates of the umpires. In the business world, accountants are
the statisticians and the umpires. Therein lies the problem. An umpire decides
what's a ball/strike, hit/foul, etc. and then leaves it up to baseball
statisticians to book the numbers. In the world of business, accountants decide
what are current versus deferred revenues, current versus capitalized costs, and
additionally make highly subjective estimates about values of such things as
forward contracts and interest rate swaps. After making their inaccurate
estimates they then put on another hat, change chairs, and record their own
estimates to the nearest penny. They're the business world's umpires and
statisticians who simply change hats and chairs and wait for the investors to
file lawsuits against them.
Humor about understanding research literature ---
http://maaw.info/ArticleSummaries/ArtSumIngram87.htm
Thank you Rob Ingram and James Martin
Yale Rolls Out 10 New Courses – All Free ---
Click Here
http://www.openculture.com/2011/04/yale_rolls_out_10_new_open_courses.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+OpenCulture+%28Open+Culture%29
Walter Kaufmann’s Lectures on Nietzsche, Kierkegaard and Sartre (1960)
---
Click Here
http://www.openculture.com/2011/04/walter_kaufmanns_lectures.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+OpenCulture+%28Open+Culture%29
Bob Jensen's threads on free courses and/or course materials from
prestigious universities ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/updateee.htm#OKI
Brief
Very Long Summary of Accounting Theory
Bob Jensen at Trinity University
Warning 1: Many of the links were broken when
the FASB changed all of its links. If a link to a FASB site does not work
, Go to the new FASB link and search for the document. The FASB home page
is at http://www.fasb.org/
Warning 2: The document below has not been updated for the
FASB's Codification Database. Although the database is off to a great (albeit
dumb, dumb, dumb) start, there is
much information in this document and in prior FASB hard copy standards and in the FASB standards that cannot be found
in the Codification Database. You can read the following at
http://asc.fasb.org/asccontent&trid=2273304&nav_type=left_nav
Welcome to the Financial Accounting Standards Board
(FASB) Accounting Standards Codification™ (Codification).
The Codification is the result of a major four-year
project involving over 200 people from multiple entities. The Codification
structure is significantly different from the structure of existing
accounting standards. The Notice to Constituents provides information you
should read to obtain a good understanding of the Codification history,
content, structure, and future consequences.
ASC = Accounting Standard Codification of the FASB
January 8, 2013 message from Zane Swanson
Another
faculty person created a video (link follows)
http://www.screencast.com/t/K8gruSHTv
which
introduces the ASC. This video has potential value at the beginning of the
semester to acquaint students with the ASC. I am thinking about posting the
clip to AAA commons. But, where should it be posted and does this type of
thing get posted in multiple interest group areas?
Any thoughts /
suggestions?
Zane Swanson
www.askaref.com
a handheld device source of ASC information
Jensen Comment
A disappointment for colleges and students is that access to the Codification
database is not free. The FASB does offer deeply discounted prices to colleges
but not to individual teachers or students.
There are other access routes that are not free such as the PwC Comperio (now
called Inform) ---
http://www.pwc.com/gx/en/comperio/index.jhtml
Hi Zane,
This is a great video helper for learning how
to use the FASB.s Codification database.
An enormous disappointment to me is how the
Codification omits many, many illustrations in the
pre-codification pronouncements that are still available
electronically as PDF files. In particular, the best way to
learn a very complicated standard like FAS 133 is to study the
illustrations in the original FAS 133, FAS 138, etc.
The FASB paid a fortune for experts to develop the
illustrations in the pre-codification pronouncements. It's sad that
those investments are wasted in the Codification database.
What is even worse is that accounting teachers are
forgetting to go to the pre-codification pronouncements for wonderful
illustrations to use in class and illustrations for CPA exam preparation
---
http://www.fasb.org/jsp/FASB/Page/PreCodSectionPage&cid=1218220137031
Sadly the FASB no longer seems to invest as much in
illustrations for new pronouncements in the Codification database.
Bob Jensen
Examples of great FAS 133 pre-codification illustrations are as follows:
133ex01a.xls 12-Jun-2008 03:50 345K
133ex02.doc 17-Feb-2004 06:00 2.1M
133ex02a.xls 12-Jun-2008 03:48 279K
133ex03a.xls 04-Apr-2001 06:45 92K
133ex04a.xls 12-Jun-2008 03:50 345K
133ex05.htm 04-Apr-2001 06:45 371K
133ex05a.xls 12-Jun-2008 03:49 1.5M
133ex05aSupplement.htm 26-Mar-2005 13:59 57K
133ex05aSupplement.xls 26-Mar-2005 13:50 32K
133ex05d.htm 26-Mar-2005 13:59 56K
133ex06a.xls 29-Sep-2001 11:43 123K
133ex07a.xls 08-Mar-2004 16:26 1.2M
133ex08a.xls 29-Sep-2001 11:43 216K
133ex09a.xls 12-Jun-2008 03:49 99K
133ex10.doc 17-Feb-2004 16:37 80K
133ex10a.xls
133summ.htm 13-Feb-2004 10:50 121K
138EXAMPLES.htm 30-Apr-2004 08:39 355K
138bench.htm 07-Dec-2007 05:37 139K
138ex01a.xls 09-Mar-2001 13:20 1.7M
138exh01.htm 09-Mar-2001 13:20 31K
138exh02.htm 09-Mar-2001 13:20 65K
138exh03.htm 09-Mar-2001 13:20 42K
138exh04.htm 09-Mar-2001 13:20 108K
138exh04a.htm 09-Mar-2001 13:20 8.2K
138intro.doc 09-Mar-2001 13:20 95K
138intro.htm 09-M
Others ---
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/
Accounting, Fraud, and XBRL News ---
#News
Daily News Sites for Accountancy, Tax, Fraud, IFRS, XBRL, Accounting
History, and More ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/AccountingNews.htm
FASB's Accounting Standards Codification ---
http://asc.fasb.org/home
Accounting
for Derivative Financial Instruments and Hedging Activities
Bob Jensen's free tutorials and videos for FAS 133 and IAS 39 are at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm
Teaching Cases: Hedge Accounting Scenario 1 versus Scenario
2
Two Teaching Cases Involving Southwest Airlines, Hedging, and Hedge
Accounting Controversies ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/SouthwestAirlinesQuestions.htm
A nice timeline on the development
of U.S. standards and the evolution of thinking about the income statement
versus the balance sheet is provided at:
"The Evolution of U.S. GAAP: The Political Forces Behind Professional
Standards (1930-1973)," by Stephen A. Zeff, CPA Journal, January
2005 ---
http://www.nysscpa.org/cpajournal/2005/105/infocus/p18.htm
Part II covering years
1974-2003 published in February 2005 ---
http://archives.cpajournal.com/
**************************
“Accounting for Business Firms versus Accounting for
Vegetables” ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudConclusion.htm#BadNews
Take the Enron Quiz ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudEnronQuiz.htm
Where I Made My Consulting Money and How
Accounting
History in a Nutshell
Re-branding the CPA Profession
History of Accountics
Accounting Theory Courses
Thoughts
on Bill Paton and Some Other Historical Writers in Accountancy
"Why Accounting Matters," by Edith Orenstein
Accounting for the Shadow Economy
Behavioral and Cultural Economics and Finance
Media Reporting Controversies
Efficient
Markets (EMH) versus Inefficient Markets
(including Black Swans and Fat Tails)
Islamic
and Social Responsibility Accounting
XBRL: The Next Big Thing
Key
Differences Between International (IFRS) and U.S. GAAP (SFAS)
Accounting
Research Versus the Accountancy Profession
Some ideas for applied research
Learning
at Research Schools Versus "Teaching Schools" Versus "Happiness"
With a Side Track into Substance Abuse
Why must all accounting doctoral programs be social
science (particularly econometrics) "accountics" doctoral programs?
Why accountancy doctoral programs are drying up and
why accountancy is no longer required for admission or
graduation in an accountancy doctoral program
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#DoctoralPrograms
I think leading academic
researchers avoid applied research for the profession because making
seminal and creative discoveries that practitioners have not already
discovered is enormously difficult.
Accounting academe is
threatened by the twin dangers of fossilization and scholasticism
(of three types: tedium, high tech, and radical chic)
From
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/395wpTAR/Web/TAR395wp.htm
“Knowledge and competence
increasingly developed out of the internal dynamics of esoteric
disciplines rather than within the context of shared perceptions
of public needs,” writes Bender. “This is not to say that
professionalized disciplines or the modern service professions
that imitated them became socially irresponsible. But their
contributions to society began to flow from their own
self-definitions rather than from a reciprocal engagement with
general public discourse.”
Now, there is a definite note of sadness in Bender’s narrative –
as there always tends to be in accounts
of the
shift from Gemeinschaft
to Gesellschaft. Yet it
is also clear that the transformation from civic to disciplinary
professionalism was necessary.
“The new disciplines offered relatively precise subject matter
and procedures,” Bender concedes, “at a time when both were
greatly confused. The new professionalism also promised
guarantees of competence — certification — in an era when
criteria of intellectual authority were vague and professional
performance was unreliable.”
But in the epilogue to Intellect and Public Life,
Bender suggests that the process eventually went too far.
“The
risk now is precisely the opposite,” he writes. “Academe is
threatened by the twin dangers of fossilization and
scholasticism (of three types: tedium, high tech, and radical
chic).
The agenda for the next decade, at least as I see it, ought to
be the opening up of the disciplines, the ventilating of
professional communities that have come to share too much and
that have become too self-referential.”
Accountics is the mathematical science of values.
Charles Sprague [1887] as quoted by McMillan [1998, p. 1][NH1]
What went wrong in
accounting/accountics research?
How did academic accounting
research become a pseudo science?
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#WhatWentWrong
|
GMAT: Paying for Points
Accounting Journal Lack of Interest in
Publishing Replications
Rankings of Academic Accounting Research Journals and Schools
Role of Accounting Standards in
Efficient Equity Markets
Controversies in
Setting Accounting Standards
Popular IFRS, IAS, and Other IASB Learning Resources:
Bright
Lines Versus Principles-Based Rules
Comparisons
of IFRS with Domestic Standards of Many Nations
http://www.iasplus.com/country/compare.htm
Should "principles-based"
standards replace more detailed requirements for complex
financial contracts such as structured financing contracts and financial
instruments derivatives contracts?
Why Let the I.R.S. See What the S.E.C.
Doesn't?
Radical Changes in Financial Reporting
The Controversy
Between OCI versus Current Earnings
Accrual Accounting and
Estimation
Controversy Over the SEC's Rule 144a
Cookie Jar Accounting and FAS 106
Why do sales discounts have such
high annual percentage rates?
FIN 48 Liability if Transaction Is Later
Disallowed by the IRS
Controversy Over FAS 2 versus IAS 38 on Research and
Development (R&D)
Management ((Managerial) and Cost
Accounting
Creative Earnings Management, Agency Theory, and Accounting Manipulations
to Cook the Books
Goodwill
Impairment Issues
Purchase Versus Pooling: The Never
Ending Debate
Minority Interests:
Lambs being led to slaughter?
Off-Balance
Sheet Financing (OBSF)
Insurance:
A Scheme for Hiding Debt That Won't Go Away
How do we account for lifetime warranties?
Disclosure provisions aimed at
financing receivables
and Other Dislcosure Issues
CDOs: A Securitization Scheme for Hiding Debt That Won't Go Away
Pensions
and Post-retirement benefits:
Schemes for Hiding Debt
Leases:
A Scheme for Hiding Debt That Won't Go Away
Accounting for Executory Contracts Such as
Purchase/Sale Commitments and Loan Commitments
Debt Versus Equity (including
shareholder earn-out contracts)
Synthetic Assets and
Liabilities Accounting
Time versus Money
Intangibles
and Contingencies:
Theory Disputes Focus Mainly on the Tip of the Iceberg
Intangibles: An Accounting Paradox
Intangibles: Selected References On
Accounting for Intangibles
EBR: Enhanced Business Reporting
(including non-financial information)
The Controversy Over Revenue Reporting and HFV
---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/eitf01.htm
The
Controversy Over Employee Stock Options as Compenation
Accounting for Options to Buy
Real Estate
The Controversy over Accounting
for Securitizations and Loan Guarantees
The Controversy Over
Pro Forma Reporting
Triple-Bottom
(Social, Environmental) Reporting
The Sad State of Government (Governmental) Accounting and
Accountability
The Cost Conundrum: What a Texas
town can teach us about health care
Which is More Value-Relevant:
Earnings or Cash Flows?
LIFO Sucks Teaching Case on LIFO Layers in Years of Rising
Prices
The Controversy Over Fair Value (Mark-to-Market)
Financial Reporting
Underlying
Bases of Balance Sheet Valuation
Online Resources for Business
Valuations
See
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/roi.htm
Fade, Gain, and Cost Shifting Analysis in gross
profit analysis in construction accounting
Critical Thinking: Why's
It So Hard to Teach
Understanding the Issues
Issues of Auditor
Professionalism and Independence
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#Professionalism
Quality of Earnings, Restatements,
and Core Earnings
Sale-Leaseback Accounting Controversies
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/eitf01.htm#SaleLeasback
Economic Theory of Accounting
(including Game Theory)
Socionomics Theory
of Finance and Fraud
Facts
Based on Assumptions: The Power of Postpositive Thinking
Critical Postmodern Theory ---
http://www.uta.edu/huma/illuminations/
Mike Kearl's great social
theory site
What's Right and
What's Wrong With SPEs, SPVs, and VIEs ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen//theory/00overview/speOverview.htm
Peter, Paul, and Barney: An Essay on 2008 U.S. Government
Bailouts of Private Companies ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/2008Bailout.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on GAAP comparisons (with
particular stress upon derivative financial
instruments accounting rules) are at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/canada.htm
The above site also links to more general GAAP comparison guides between
nations.
Implications of Bad Auditing on Capital Markets
and Client's Cost of Captial
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudConclusion.htm#IncompetentAudits
Bob Jensen's threads on corporate governance are at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm#Governance
Accounting Theory Courses
Modern Science and Ancient Wisdom ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#AncientWisdom
"A Wisdom 101 Course!" February 15, 2010 ---
http://www.simoleonsense.com/a-wisdom-101-course/
"Overview of Prior Research on Wisdom," Simoleon Sense,
February 15, 2010 ---
http://www.simoleonsense.com/overview-of-prior-research-on-wisdom/
"An Overview Of The Psychology Of Wisdom," Simoleon Sense,
February 15, 2010 ---
http://www.simoleonsense.com/an-overview-of-the-psychology-of-wisdom/
"The Effect of Information on Uncertainty and the Cost of Capital,"
David James Johnstone, University of Sydney, July 31, 2014 ---
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2474950
Abstract:
It is widely held that better financial reporting
makes investors more confident in their predictions of future cash flows
and reduces their required risk premia. The logic is that more
information leads necessarily to more certainty, and hence lower
subjective estimates of firm "beta" or covariance with other firms. This
is misleading on both counts. Bayesian
logic shows that the best available information can often leave decision
makers less certain about future events.
And for those cases where information indeed brings great certainty,
conventional mean-variance asset pricing models imply that more certain
estimates of future cash payoffs can sometimes bring a higher cost of
capital. This occurs when new or better information leads to
sufficiently reduced expected firm payoffs. To properly understand the
effect of signal quality on the cost of capital, it is essential to
think of what that information says, rather than considering merely its
"precision", or how strongly it says what it says.
August 3, 2014 reply from David Johnstone
The idea is that we never know “true probabilities”, even if they “exist”,
we only have subjective beliefs. These beliefs are the basis on which
actions are chosen (i.e. by maximizing subjective expected utility, if we go
to this next step). Observed frequencies feed into our beliefs, and
sometimes they are the major influence. Similarly, subjective “symmetry”
arguments (we think we see symmetry in a coin) might be a major influence in
saying that “the probability of heads” is 0.5. But a coin does not have a
probability, at least not in the sense that it has weight, metal content,
and other physical attributes.
Big names Bayesian authors with this general philosophy are Kadane (ex
editor of J American Stat Assoc), Lindley, Savage, de Finnetti, Lad, O’Hagen,
Bernardo, and others. The only rule in this world is that your beliefs must
be “coherent” in the sense that they are mutually consistent in terms of the
laws of probability. New evidence must therefore be used via Bayes theorem
to get new probabilities.
Cheers,
David
"Why Bayesian Rationality Is Empty, Perfect Rationality Doesn’t Exist,
Ecological Rationality Is Too Simple, and Critical Rationality Does the Job,"
Simoleon Sense, February 15, 2010 ---
Click Here
http://www.simoleonsense.com/why-bayesian-rationality-is-empty-perfect-rationality-doesn%e2%80%99t-exist-ecological-rationality-is-too-simple-and-critical-rationality-does-the-job/
Easier than Bayes
"Chances Are," by Steven Strogatz, The New York Times, April
25, 2010 ---
http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/04/25/chances-are/
Great Minds in Management: The Process of Theory
Development ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen//theory/00overview/GreatMinds.htm
Great Minds in Sociology ---
http://www.sociosite.net/topics/sociologists.php
Also see Also see
http://www.sociologyprofessor.com/
A Special Tribute to My Open Sharing Friend Will Yancey ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Yancey.htm
Giving Stuff Away Free on the Internet ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/ListservRoles.htm#Free
A Course in Game Theory ---
http://www.simoleonsense.com/a-course-in-game-theory-martin-j-osborne/
"Saturn (Now Defunct Automobile): A Wealth of Lessons
from Failure," University of Pennsylvania's Knowledge@Wharton,
October 28, 2009 ---
http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article.cfm?articleid=2366
"Cornell Theory Center Aids Social Science Researchers,"
PR Web, June 19, 2006 ---
http://www.prweb.com/releases/2006/6/prweb400160.htm
"The Ph.D. Problem On the professionalization of faculty
life, doctoral training, and the academy’s self-renewal," by Louis Menand,
Harvard Magazine, November/December 2009 ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/HigherEdControversies.htm#DoctoralProgramChange
How Do Scholars Search? ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Searchh.htm#Scholars
Some of the many, many lawsuits settled by auditing
firms can be found at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm
Higher Education Controversies ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/HigherEdControversies.htm
Wonderful Video on the History and Controversies of Logical Positivism
(Vienna Circle) and Philosophy of Science
Pragmatism under William James ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_James
Metaphysics ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metaphysics
Logical Positivism under Karl Popper ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karl_Popper
Logical Positivism
under Sir Alfred Jules (A.J.) Ayer ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfred_Ayer
The philosophy of leadership, management, and theory development ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory/00overview/GreatMinds.htm
574 Shields Against Validity Challenges in Plato's Cave ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/TheoryTAR.htm
-
With a Rejoinder from the 2010 Senior Editor of The Accounting Review
(TAR), Steven J. Kachelmeier
- With Replies in Appendix 4 to Professor Kachemeier by Professors
Jagdish Gangolly and Paul Williams
- With Added Conjectures in Appendix 1 as to Why the Profession of
Accountancy Ignores TAR
- With Suggestions in Appendix 2 for Incorporating Accounting Research
into Undergraduate Accounting Courses
574 Shields Against Validity Challenges in Plato's Cave
---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/TheoryTAR.htm
by Bob Jensen
Table of Contents
- Tom Lehrer on Mathematical Models and Statistics
- TAR versus AMR
- Introduction to Replication Commentaries
- TAR Versus JEC
- Accounting Research Versus Social Science Research
- Mathematical Analytics in Plato's Cave TAR Researchers Playing by
Themselves in an Isolated Dark Cave That the Sunlight Cannot Reach
- High Hopes Dashed for a Change in Policy of TAR Regarding Commentaries
on Previously Published Research
- Rejoinder from the Current Senior Editor of TAR, Steven J. Kachelmeier
- Conclusion and Recommendation for a Journal Named Supplemental
Commentaries and Replication Abstracts
- Appendix 1: Business Firms and Business School Teachers Largely Ignore
TAR Research Articles
- Appendix 2: Integrating Academic Research Into Undergraduate Accounting
Courses
- Appendix 3: Audit Pricing in the Real World
- Appendix 4: Replies from Jagdish Gangolly and Paul Williams
Steven J. Kachelmeier's July 2011 Editorial as Departing Senior Editor of
The Accounting Review (TAR)
"Introduction to a Forum on Internal Control Reporting and Corporate Debt,"
by Steven J. Kachelmeier, The Accounting Review, Vol. 86, No. 4, July
2011 pp. 1129–113 (not free online) ---
http://aaapubs.aip.org/getpdf/servlet/GetPDFServlet?filetype=pdf&id=ACRVAS000086000004001129000001&idtype=cvips&prog=normal
One of the more surprising things I
have learned from my experience as Senior Editor of
The Accounting Review
is just how often a
‘‘hot
topic’’
generates multiple
submissions that pursue similar research objectives. Though one might view
such situations as enhancing the credibility of research findings through
the independent efforts of multiple research teams, they often result in
unfavorable reactions from reviewers who question the incremental
contribution of a subsequent study that does not materially advance the
findings already documented in a previous study, even if the two (or more)
efforts were initiated independently and pursued more or less concurrently.
I understand the reason for a high incremental contribution standard in a
top-tier journal that faces capacity constraints and deals with about 500
new submissions per year. Nevertheless, I must admit that I sometimes feel
bad writing a rejection letter on a good study, just because some other
research team beat the authors to press with similar conclusions documented
a few months earlier. Research, it seems, operates in a highly competitive
arena.
Fortunately, from time to time, we
receive related but still distinct submissions that, in combination, capture
synergies (and reviewer support) by viewing a broad research question from
different perspectives. The two articles comprising this issue’s forum are a
classic case in point. Though both studies reach the same basic conclusion
that material weaknesses in internal controls over financial reporting
result in negative repercussions for the cost of debt financing, Dhaliwal et
al. (2011) do so by examining the public market for corporate debt
instruments, whereas Kim et al. (2011) examine private debt contracting with
financial institutions. These different perspectives enable the two research
teams to pursue different secondary analyses, such as Dhaliwal et al.’s
examination of the sensitivity of the reported findings to bank monitoring
and Kim et al.’s examination of debt covenants.
Both studies also overlap with yet a
third recent effort in this arena, recently published in the
Journal of Accounting
Research by Costello and
Wittenberg-Moerman (2011). Although the overall
‘‘punch
line’’
is similar in all three studies (material
internal control weaknesses result in a higher cost of debt), I am intrigued
by a ‘‘mini-debate’’
of sorts on the different conclusions
reache by Costello and Wittenberg-Moerman (2011) and by Kim et al.
(2011) for the effect of material weaknesses on debt covenants.
Specifically, Costello and Wittenberg-Moerman (2011, 116) find that
‘‘serious,
fraud-related weaknesses result in a significant decrease in financial
covenants,’’
presumably because banks substitute more
direct protections in such instances, whereas Kim et al.
Published Online: July 2011
(2011) assert from their cross-sectional
design that company-level material weaknesses are associated with
more
financial covenants in
debt contracting.
In reconciling these conflicting
findings, Costello and Wittenberg-Moerman (2011, 116) attribute the Kim et
al. (2011) result to underlying
‘‘differences
in more fundamental firm characteristics, such as riskiness and information
opacity,’’
given that, cross-sectionally, material
weakness firms have a greater number of financial covenants than do
non-material weakness firms even
before the disclosure of the material
weakness in internal controls. Kim et al. (2011) counter that they control
for risk and opacity characteristics, and that advance leakage of internal
control problems could still result in a debt covenant effect due to
internal controls rather than underlying firm characteristics. Kim et al.
(2011) also report from a supplemental change analysis that, comparing the
pre- and post-SOX 404 periods, the number of debt covenants falls for
companies both with and without
material
weaknesses in internal controls, raising the question of whether the
Costello and Wittenberg-Moerman (2011)
finding reflects a reaction to the disclosures or simply a more general
trend of a declining number of debt covenants affecting all firms around
that time period. I urge readers to take a look at both articles, along with
Dhaliwal et al. (2011), and draw their own conclusions. Indeed, I believe
that these sorts . . .
Continued in article
Jensen Comment
Without admitting to it, I think Steve has been embarrassed, along with many
other accountics researchers, about the virtual absence of validation and
replication of accounting science (accountics) research studies over the past
five decades. For the most part, accountics articles are either ignored or
accepted as truth without validation. Behavioral and capital markets empirical
studies are rarely (ever?) replicated. Analytical studies make tremendous leaps
of faith in terms of underlying assumptions that are rarely challenged (such as
the assumption of equations depicting utility functions of corporations).
Accounting science thereby has become a pseudo
science where highly paid accountics professor referees are protecting each
others' butts ---
"574 Shields Against Validity Challenges in Plato's Cave" ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/TheoryTAR.htm
The above link contains Steve's rejoinders on the replication debate.
In the above editorial he's telling us that there is a middle ground for
validation of accountics studies. When researchers independently come to similar
conclusions using different data sets and different quantitative analyses they
are in a sense validating each others' work without truly replicating each
others' work.
I agree with Steve on this, but I would also argue that these types of
"validation" is too little to late relative to genuine science where replication
and true validation are essential to the very definition of science. The types
independent but related research that Steve is discussing above is too
infrequent and haphazard to fall into the realm of validation and replication.
When's the last time you witnesses a TAR author criticizing the research of
another TAR author (TAR does not publish critical commentaries)?
Are TAR articles really all that above criticism?
Even though I admire Steve's scholarship, dedication,
and sacrifice, I hope future TAR editors will work harder at turning accountics
research into real science!
What Went Wrong With Accountics Research? ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#WhatWentWrong
"574 Shields Against Validity Challenges in Plato's Cave" ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/TheoryTAR.htm
"Is Modern Portfolio Theory Dead? Come On," by Paul Pfleiderer,
TechCrunch, August 11, 2012 ---
http://techcrunch.com/2012/08/11/is-modern-portfolio-theory-dead-come-on/
A few weeks ago, TechCrunch published a piece
arguing software is better at investing than 99% of human investment
advisors. That post, titled
Thankfully, Software Is Eating The Personal Investing World,
pointed out the advantages of engineering-driven
software solutions versus emotionally driven human judgment. Perhaps not
surprisingly, some commenters (including some financial advisors) seized the
moment to call into question one of the foundations of software-based
investing, Modern Portfolio Theory.
Given the doubts raised by a small but vocal
chorus, it’s worth spending some time to ask if we need a new investing
paradigm and if so, what it should be. Answering that question helps show
why MPT still is the best investment methodology out there; it enables the
automated, low-cost investment management offered by a new wave of Internet
startups including
Wealthfront
(which I advise),
Personal Capital,
Future Advisor
and SigFig.
The basic questions being raised about MPT run
something like this:
- Hasn’t recent experience – i.e., the financial
crisis — shown that diversification doesn’t work?
- Shouldn’t we primarily worry about “Black
Swan” events and unforeseen risk?
- Don’t these unknown unknowns mean we must
develop a new approach to investing?
Let’s begin by briefly laying out the key insights
of MPT.
MPT is based in part on the assumption that most
investors don’t like risk and need to be compensated for bearing it. That
compensation comes in the form of higher average returns. Historical data
strongly supports this assumption. For example, from 1926 to 2011 the
average (geometric) return on U.S. Treasury Bills was 3.6%. Over the same
period the average return on large company stocks was 9.8%; that on small
company stocks was 11.2% ( See 2012 Ibbotson Stocks, Bonds, Bills and
Inflation (SBBI) Valuation Yearbook, Morningstar, Inc., page 23. ). Stocks,
of course, are much riskier than Treasuries, so we expect them to have
higher average returns — and they do.
One of MPT’s key insights is that while investors
need to be compensated to bear risk, not all risks are rewarded. The market
does not reward risks that can be “diversified away” by holding a bundle of
investments, instead of a single investment. By recognizing that not all
risks are rewarded, MPT helped establish the idea that a diversified
portfolio can help investors earn a higher return for the same amount of
risk.
To understand which risks can be diversified away,
and why, consider Zynga. Zynga hit $14.69 in March and has since dropped to
less than $2 per share. Based on what’s happened over the past few months,
the major risks associated with Zynga’s stock are things such as delays in
new game development, the fickle taste of consumers and changes on Facebook
that affect users’ engagement with Zynga’s games.
For company insiders, who have much of their wealth
tied up in the company, Zynga is clearly a risky investment. Although those
insiders are exposed to huge risks, they aren’t the investors who determine
the “risk premium” for Zynga. (A stock’s risk premium is the extra return
the stock is expected to earn that compensates for the stock’s risk.)
Rather, institutional funds and other large
investors establish the risk premium by deciding what price they’re willing
to pay to hold Zynga in their diversified portfolios. If a Zynga game is
delayed, and Zynga’s stock price drops, that decline has a miniscule effect
on a diversified shareholder’s portfolio returns. Because of this, the
market does not price in that particular risk. Even the overall turbulence
in many Internet stocks won’t be problematic for investors who are well
diversified in their portfolios.
Modern Portfolio Theory focuses on constructing
portfolios that avoid exposing the investor to those kinds of unrewarded
risks. The main lesson is that investors should choose portfolios that lie
on the Efficient Frontier, the mathematically defined curve that describes
the relationship between risk and reward. To be on the frontier, a portfolio
must provide the highest expected return (largest reward) among all
portfolios having the same level of risk. The Internet startups construct
well-diversified portfolios designed to be efficient with the right
combination of risk and return for their clients.
Now let’s ask if anything in the past five years
casts doubt on these basic tenets of Modern Portfolio Theory. The answer is
clearly, “No.” First and foremost, nothing has changed the fact that there
are many unrewarded risks, and that investors should avoid these risks. The
major risks of Zynga stock remain diversifiable risks, and unless you’re
willing to trade illegally on inside information about, say, upcoming
changes to Facebook’s gaming policies, you should avoid holding a
concentrated position in Zynga.
The efficient frontier is still the desirable place
to be, and it makes no sense to follow a policy that puts you in a position
well below that frontier.
Most of the people who say that “diversification
failed” in the financial crisis have in mind not the diversification gains
associated with avoiding concentrated investments in companies like Zynga,
but the diversification gains that come from investing across many different
asset classes, such as domestic stocks, foreign stocks, real estate and
bonds. Those critics aren’t challenging the idea of diversification in
general – probably because such an effort would be nonsensical.
True, diversification across asset classes didn’t
shelter investors from 2008’s turmoil. In that year, the S&P 500 index fell
37%, the MSCI EAFE index (the index of developed markets outside North
America) fell by 43%, the MSCI Emerging Market index fell by 53%, the Dow
Jones Commodities Index fell by 35%, and the Lehman High Yield Bond Index
fell by 26%. The historical record shows that in times of economic distress,
asset class returns tend to move in the same direction and be more highly
correlated. These increased correlations are no doubt due to the increased
importance of macro factors driving corporate cash flows. The increased
correlations limit, but do not eliminate, diversification’s value. It would
be foolish to conclude from this that you should be undiversified. If a seat
belt doesn’t provide perfect protection, it still makes sense to wear one.
Statistics show it’s better to wear a seatbelt than to not wear one.
Similarly, statistics show diversification reduces risk, and that you are
better off diversifying than not.
Timing the market
The obvious question to ask anyone who insists
diversification across asset classes is not effective is: What is the
alternative? Some say “Time the market.” Make sure you hold an asset class
when it is earning good returns, but sell as soon as things are about to go
south. Even better, take short positions when the outlook is negative. With
a trustworthy crystal ball, this is a winning strategy. The potential gains
are huge. If you had perfect foresight and could time the S&P 500
on a daily basis, you could have turned $1,000 on Jan. 1, 2000, into
$120,975,000 on Dec. 31, 2009, just by going in and out of the market. If
you could also short the market when appropriate, the gains would have been
even more spectacular!
Sometimes, it seems someone may have a fairly
reliable crystal ball. Consider John Paulson, who in 2007 and 2008 seemed so
prescient in profiting from the subprime market’s collapse. It appears,
however, that Mr. Paulson’s crystal ball became less reliable after his
stunning success in 2007. His Advantage Plus fund experienced more than a
50% loss in 2011. Separating luck from skill is often difficult.
Some people try to come up with a way to time the
market based on historical data. In fact a large number of strategies will
work well “in the back test.” The question is whether any system is reliable
enough to use for future investing.
There are at least three reasons to be cautious
about substituting a timing system for diversification.
- First, a timing system that does not work can
impose significant transaction costs (including avoidable adverse tax
consequences) on the investor for no gain.
- Second, an ill-founded timing strategy
generally exposes the investor to risk that is unrewarded. In other
words, it puts the investor below the frontier, which is not a good
place to be.
- Third, a timing system’s success may create
the seeds of its own destruction. If too many investors blindly follow
the strategy, prices will be driven to erase any putative gains that
might have been there, turning the strategy into a losing proposition.
Also, a timing strategy designed to “beat the market” must involve
trading into “good” positions and away from “bad” ones. That means there
must be a sucker (or several suckers) available to take on the other
(losing) sides. (No doubt in most cases each party to the trade thinks
the sucker is on the other side.)
Black Swans
What about those Black Swans? Doesn’t MPT ignore
the possibility that we can be surprised by the unexpected? Isn’t it
impossible to measure risk when there are unknown unknowns?
Most people recognize that financial markets are
not like simple games of chance where risk can be quantified precisely. As
we’ve seen (e.g., the “Black Monday” stock market crash of 1987 and the
“flash crash” of 2010), the markets can produce extreme events that hardly
anyone contemplated as a possibility. As opposed to poker, where we always
draw from the same 52-card deck, in financial markets, asset returns are
drawn from changing distributions as the world economy and financial
relationships change.
Some Black Swan events turned out to have limited
effects on investors over the long term. Although the market dropped
precipitously in October 1987, it was close to fully recovered in June 1988.
The flash crash was confined to a single day.
This is not to say that all “surprise” events are transitory. The Great
Depression followed the stock market crash of 1929, and the effects of the
financial crisis in 2007 and 2008 linger on five years later.
The question is, how should we respond to
uncertainties and Black Swans? One sensible way is to be more diligent in
quantifying the risks we can see. For example, since extreme events don’t
happen often, we’re likely to be misled if we base our risk assessment on
what has occurred over short time periods. We shouldn’t conclude that just
because housing prices haven’t gone down over 20 years that a housing
decline is not a meaningful risk. In the case of natural disasters like
earthquakes, tsunamis, asteroid strikes and solar storms, the long run could
be very long indeed. While we can’t capture all risks by looking far back in
time, taking into account long-term data means we’re less likely to be
surprised.
Some people suggest you should respond to the risk
of unknown unknowns by investing very conservatively. This means allocating
most of the portfolio to “safe assets” and significantly reducing exposure
to risky assets, which are likely to be affected by Black Swan surprises.
This response is consistent with MPT. If you worry about Black Swans, you
are, for all intents and purposes, a very risk-averse investor. The MPT
portfolio position for very risk-averse investors is a position on the
efficient frontier that has little risk.
The cost of investing in a low-risk position is a
lower expected return (recall that historically the average return on stocks
was about three times that on U.S. Treasuries), but maybe you think that’s a
price worth paying. Can everyone take extremely conservative positions to
avoid Black Swan risk? This clearly won’t work, because some investors must
hold risky assets. If all investors try to avoid Black Swan events, the
prices of those risky assets will fall to a point where the forecasted
returns become too large to ignore.
Continued in article
Jensen Comment
All quant theories and strategies in finance are based upon some foundational
assumptions that in rare instances turn into the
Achilles'
heel of the entire superstructure. The classic example is the wonderful
theory and arbitrage strategy of Long Term Capital Management (LTCM) formed by
the best quants in finance (two with Nobel Prizes in economics). After
remarkable successes one nickel at a time in a secret global arbitrage strategy
based heavily on the Black-Scholes Model, LTCM placed a trillion dollar bet that
failed dramatically and became the only hedge fund that nearly imploded all of
Wall Street. At a heavy cost, Wall Street investment bankers pooled billions of
dollars to quietly shut down LTCM ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#LTCM
So what was the Achilles heal of the arbitrage strategy of LTCM? It was an
assumption that a huge portion of the global financial market would not collapse
all at once. Low and behold, the Asian financial markets collapsed all at once
and left LTCM naked and dangling from a speculative cliff.
There is a tremendous (one of the best
videos I've ever seen on the Black-Scholes Model) PBS Nova video called
"Trillion Dollar Bet" explaining why LTCM
collapsed. Go to
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/stockmarket/
This video is in the media libraries on most college campuses. I highly
recommend showing this video to students. It is extremely well done and
exciting to watch.
One of the more interesting summaries is the Report of The President’s
Working Group on Financial Markets, April 1999 ---
http://www.ustreas.gov/press/releases/reports/hedgfund.pdf
The principal
policy issue arising out of the events surrounding the near collapse of LTCM
is how to constrain excessive leverage. By increasing the chance that
problems at one financial institution could be transmitted to other
institutions, excessive leverage can increase the likelihood of a general
breakdown in the functioning of financial markets. This issue is not limited
to hedge funds; other financial institutions are often larger and more
highly leveraged than most hedge funds.
What went wrong at Long Term Capital
Management? ---
http://www.killer-essays.com/Economics/euz220.shtml
The video and above reports, however, do not delve into the tax shelter
pushed by Myron Scholes and his other LTCM partners. A nice summary of the tax
shelter case with links to other documents can be found at
http://www.cambridgefinance.com/CFP-LTCM.pdf
The above August 27,
2004 ruling by Judge Janet Bond Arterton rounds out the "Trillion Dollar Bet."
The classic and enormous scandal was
Long Term Capital led by Nobel Prize winning Merton and Scholes (actually the
blame is shared with their devoted doctoral students). There is a tremendous
(one of the best videos I've ever seen on the Black-Scholes Model) PBS Nova
video ("Trillion Dollar Bet") explaining why LTC collapsed. Go to
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/stockmarket/
Another illustration of the Achilles' heel of a popular mathematical theory
and strategy is the 2008 collapse mortgage-backed CDO financial risk bonds based
upon David Li's Gaussian copula function of risk diversification in portfolios.
The Achilles' heel was the assumption that the real estate bubble would not
burst to a point where millions of subprime mortgages would all go into default
at roughly the same time.
Can the 2008 investment banking failure be traced to a math error?
Recipe for Disaster: The Formula That Killed Wall Street ---
http://www.wired.com/techbiz/it/magazine/17-03/wp_quant?currentPage=all
Link forwarded by Jim Mahar ---
http://financeprofessorblog.blogspot.com/2009/03/recipe-for-disaster-formula-that-killed.html
Some highlights:
"For five years, Li's formula, known as a
Gaussian copula function, looked like an unambiguously positive
breakthrough, a piece of financial technology that allowed hugely
complex risks to be modeled with more ease and accuracy than ever
before. With his brilliant spark of mathematical legerdemain, Li made it
possible for traders to sell vast quantities of new securities,
expanding financial markets to unimaginable levels.
His method was adopted by everybody from bond
investors and Wall Street banks to ratings agencies and regulators. And
it became so deeply entrenched—and was making people so much money—that
warnings about its limitations were largely ignored.
Then the model fell apart." The article goes on to show that correlations
are at the heart of the problem.
"The reason that ratings agencies and investors
felt so safe with the triple-A tranches was that they believed there was
no way hundreds of homeowners would all default on their loans at the
same time. One person might lose his job, another might fall ill. But
those are individual calamities that don't affect the mortgage pool much
as a whole: Everybody else is still making their payments on time.
But not all calamities are individual, and
tranching still hadn't solved all the problems of mortgage-pool risk.
Some things, like falling house prices, affect a large number of people
at once. If home values in your neighborhood decline and you lose some
of your equity, there's a good chance your neighbors will lose theirs as
well. If, as a result, you default on your mortgage, there's a higher
probability they will default, too. That's called correlation—the degree
to which one variable moves in line with another—and measuring it is an
important part of determining how risky mortgage bonds are."
I would highly recommend reading the entire thing that gets much more
involved with the
actual formula etc.
The
“math error” might truly be have been an error or it might have simply been a
gamble with what was perceived as miniscule odds of total market failure.
Something similar happened in the case of the trillion-dollar disastrous 1993
collapse of Long Term Capital Management formed by Nobel Prize winning
economists and their doctoral students who took similar gambles that ignored the
“miniscule odds” of world market collapse -- -
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#LTCM
The rhetorical question is whether the failure is ignorance in model building or
risk taking using the model?
"In Plato's Cave:
Mathematical models are a powerful way of predicting financial markets. But they
are fallible" The Economist, January 24, 2009, pp. 10-14 ---
http://www.economist.com/specialreports/displaystory.cfm?story_id=12957753
ROBERT RUBIN was Bill Clinton’s treasury
secretary. He has worked at the top of Goldman Sachs and Citigroup. But he
made arguably the single most influential decision of his long career in
1983, when as head of risk arbitrage at Goldman he went to the MIT Sloan
School of Management in Cambridge, Massachusetts, to hire an economist
called Fischer Black.
A decade earlier Myron Scholes, Robert
Merton and Black had explained how to use share prices to calculate the
value of derivatives. The Black-Scholes options-pricing model was more than
a piece of geeky mathematics. It was a manifesto, part of a revolution that
put an end to the anti-intellectualism of American finance and transformed
financial markets from bull rings into today’s quantitative powerhouses.
Yet, in a roundabout way, Black’s approach also led to some of the late
boom’s most disastrous lapses.
Derivatives markets are not new, nor are
they an exclusively Western phenomenon. Mr Merton has described how Osaka’s
Dojima rice market offered forward contracts in the 17th century and
organised futures trading by the 18th century. However, the growth of
derivatives in the 36 years since Black’s formula was published has taken
them from the periphery of financial services to the core.
In “The Partnership”, a history of Goldman
Sachs, Charles Ellis records how the derivatives markets took off. The
International Monetary Market opened in 1972; Congress allowed trade in
commodity options in 1976; S&P 500 futures launched in 1982, and options on
those futures a year later. The Chicago Board Options Exchange traded 911
contracts on April 26th 1973, its first day (and only one month before
Black-Scholes appeared in print). In 2007 the CBOE’s volume of contracts
reached almost 1 trillion.
Trading has exploded partly because
derivatives are useful. After America came off the gold standard in 1971,
businesses wanted a way of protecting themselves against the movements in
exchange rates, just as they sought protection against swings in interest
rates after Paul Volcker, Mr Greenspan’s predecessor as chairman of the Fed,
tackled inflation in the 1980s. Equity options enabled investors to lay off
general risk so that they could concentrate on the specific types of
corporate risk they wanted to trade.
The other force behind the explosion in
derivatives trading was the combination of mathematics and computing. Before
Black-Scholes, option prices had been little more than educated guesses. The
new model showed how to work out an option price from the known price-behaviour
of a share and a bond. It is as if you had a formula for working out the
price of a fruit salad from the prices of the apples and oranges that went
into it, explains Emanuel Derman, a physicist who later took Black’s job at
Goldman. Confidence in pricing gave buyers and sellers the courage to pile
into derivatives. The better that real prices correlate with the unknown
option price, the more confidently you can take on any level of risk. “In a
thirsty world filled with hydrogen and oxygen,” Mr Derman has written,
“someone had finally worked out how to synthesise H2O.”
Poetry in Brownian motion Black-Scholes is
just a model, not a complete description of the world. Every model makes
simplifications, but some of the simplifications in Black-Scholes looked as
if they would matter. For instance, the maths it uses to describe how share
prices move comes from the equations in physics that describe the diffusion
of heat. The idea is that share prices follow some gentle random walk away
from an equilibrium, rather like motes of dust jiggling around in Brownian
motion. In fact, share-price movements are more violent than that.
Over the years the “quants” have found
ways to cope with this—better ways to deal with, as it were, quirks in the
prices of fruit and fruit salad. For a start, you can concentrate on the
short-run volatility of prices, which in some ways tends to behave more like
the Brownian motion that Black imagined. The quants can introduce sudden
jumps or tweak their models to match actual share-price movements more
closely. Mr Derman, who is now a professor at New York’s Columbia University
and a partner at Prisma Capital Partners, a fund of hedge funds, did some of
his best-known work modelling what is called the “volatility smile”—an
anomaly in options markets that first appeared after the 1987 stockmarket
crash when investors would pay extra for protection against another imminent
fall in share prices.
The fixes can make models complex and
unwieldy, confusing traders or deterring them from taking up new ideas.
There is a constant danger that behaviour in the market changes, as it did
after the 1987 crash, or that liquidity suddenly dries up, as it has done in
this crisis. But the quants are usually pragmatic enough to cope. They are
not seeking truth or elegance, just a way of capturing the behaviour of a
market and of linking an unobservable or illiquid price to prices in traded
markets. The limit to the quants’ tinkering has been not mathematics but the
speed, power and cost of computers. Nobody has any use for a model which
takes so long to compute that the markets leave it behind.
The idea behind quantitative finance is to
manage risk. You make money by taking known risks and hedging the rest. And
in this crash foreign-exchange, interest-rate and equity derivatives models
have so far behaved roughly as they should.
A muddle of mortgages Yet the idea behind
modelling got garbled when pools of mortgages were bundled up into
collateralised-debt obligations (CDOs). The principle is simple enough.
Imagine a waterfall of mortgage payments: the AAA investors at the top catch
their share, the next in line take their share from what remains, and so on.
At the bottom are the “equity investors” who get nothing if people default
on their mortgage payments and the money runs out.
Despite theory, CDOs were hopeless, at
least with hindsight (doesn’t that phrase come easily?). The cash flowing
from mortgage payments into a single CDO had to filter up through several
layers. Assets were bundled into a pool, securitised, stuffed into a CDO,
bits of that plugged into the next CDO and so on and on. Each source of a
CDO had interminable pages of its own documentation and conditions, and a
typical CDO might receive income from several hundred sources. It was a
lawyer’s paradise.
This baffling complexity could hardly be
more different from an equity or an interest rate. It made CDOs impossible
to model in anything but the most rudimentary way—all the more so because
each one contained a unique combination of underlying assets. Each CDO would
be sold on the basis of its own scenario, using central assumptions about
the future of interest rates and defaults to “demonstrate” the payouts over,
say, the next 30 years. This central scenario would then be “stress-tested”
to show that the CDO was robust—though oddly the tests did not include a 20%
fall in house prices.
This was modelling at its most feeble.
Derivatives model an unknown price from today’s known market prices. By
contrast, modelling from history is dangerous. There was no guarantee that
the future would be like the past, if only because the American housing
market had never before been buoyed up by a frenzy of CDOs. In any case,
there are not enough past housing data to form a rich statistical picture of
the market—especially if you decide not to include the 1930s nationwide fall
in house prices in your sample.
Neither could the models take account of
falling mortgage-underwriting standards. Mr Rajan of the University of
Chicago says academic research suggests mortgage originators, keen to
automate their procedures, stopped giving potential borrowers lengthy
interviews because they could not easily quantify the firmness of someone’s
handshake or the fixity of their gaze. Such things turned out to be better
predictors of default than credit scores or loan-to-value ratios, but the
investors at the end of a long chain of securities could not monitor lending
decisions.
The issuers of CDOs asked rating agencies
to assess their quality. Although the agencies insist that they did a
thorough job, a senior quant at a large bank says that the agencies’ models
were even less sophisticated than the issuers’. For instance, a BBB tranche
in a CDO might pay out in full if the defaults remained below 6%, and not at
all once they went above 6.5%. That is an all-or-nothing sort of return,
quite different from a BBB corporate bond, say. And yet, because both shared
the same BBB rating, they would be modelled in the same way.
Issuers like to have an edge over the
rating agencies. By paying one for rating the CDOs, some may have laid
themselves open to a conflict of interest. With help from companies like
Codefarm, an outfit from Brighton in Britain that knew the agencies’ models
for corporate CDOs, issuers could build securities with any risk profile
they chose, including those made up from lower-quality ingredients that
would nevertheless win AAA ratings. Codefarm has recently applied for
administration.
There is a saying on Wall Street that the
test of a product is whether clients will buy it. Would they have bought
into CDOs had it not been for the dazzling performance of the quants in
foreign-exchange, interest-rate and equity derivatives? There is every sign
that the issuing banks believed their own sales patter. The banks so liked
CDOs that they held on to a lot of their own issues, even when the idea
behind the business had been to sell them on. They also lent buyers much of
the money to bid for CDOs, certain that the securities were a sound
investment. With CDOs in deep trouble, the lenders are now suffering.
Modern finance is supposed to be all about
measuring risks, yet corporate and mortgage-backed CDOs were a leap in the
dark. According to Mr Derman, with Black-Scholes “you know what you are
assuming when you use the model, and you know exactly what has been swept
out of view, and hence you can think clearly about what you may have
overlooked.” By contrast, with CDOs “you don’t quite know what you are
ignoring, so you don’t know how to adjust for its inadequacies.”
Now that the world has moved far beyond
any of the scenarios that the CDO issuers modelled, investors’ quantitative
grasp of the payouts has fizzled into blank uncertainty. That makes it hard
to put any value on them, driving away possible buyers. The trillion-dollar
bet on mortgages has gone disastrously wrong. The hope is that the
trillion-dollar bet on companies does not end up that way too.
Continued in article
Closing Jensen Comment
So is portfolio diversification theory dead? I hardly think so. But if any
lesson is to be learned is that we should question those critical underlying
assumptions in Plato's Cave before worldwide strategies are implemented that
overlook the Achilles' heel of those critical underlying assumptions.
"History, Not Politics," by Serena Golden, Inside Higher Ed,
May 21, 2010 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2010/05/21/spence
Jonathan Spence came here
to deliver a speech, but don't let that fool you: his address -- the 39th
Annual Jefferson Lecture in the Humanities, which took place Thursday -- in
no way resembled the sort typically associated with D.C.
The Jefferson Lecture is
sponsored by the National Endowment for the Humanities, which describes the
lecture as "the most prestigious honor the federal government bestows for
distinguished intellectual achievement in the humanities." Those
chosen
for the distinction are typically academics or
creative types (or both) -- but, given the setting, the sponsor, and the
nature of the award (which "recognizes an individual... who has the ability
to communicate the knowledge and wisdom of the humanities in a broad,
appealing way"), Jefferson Lecturers have historically taken the opportunity
to make a larger (and sometimes tacitly political) point related to the
humanities. Last year, controversial bioethicist
Leon Kass used his lecture
to criticize the way the humanities are taught and researched at American
universities; in 2007,
Harvey Mansfield argued, with many subtle
political allusions, that the social sciences are in dire need of "the help
of literature and history";
Tom Wolfe's 2006 lecture discussed how the
humanities shed light on modern culture (and lamented the current state of
that culture on campuses); 2005 lecturer Donald Kagan and 2004 lecturer
Helen Vendler offered opposing views on which disciplines of the humanities
are most crucial, and why.
If any of those in the
crowd (noticeably larger than last year's) at the Warner Theater last night
were familiar with the Jefferson Lectures of years prior, they were in for a
surprise.
Spence is Sterling
Professor of History Emeritus at Yale University, whose faculty he joined in
1966. His specialty has always been China -- his 14 books on Chinese history
include 1990's The Search for Modern China, upon whose publication
the New York Times
accurately predicted that it would "undoubtedly
become a standard text on the subject" -- and his lecture was entitled
"When
Minds Met: China and the West in the Seventeenth Century."
Even this relatively specific appellation, however,
conveys a misleading breadth, for Spence's lecture focused almost
exclusively on three men -- Shen Fuzong, an exceptionally learned Chinese
traveler; Thomas Hyde, an English scholar of history and language; and
Robert Boyle, also English, a scientist and philosopher of considerable
renown -- and one year: 1687.
In his lecture, Spence gave
what may (or may not) have been one brief acknowledgment that he'd chosen an
unusually narrow topic of discourse: "It is a commonplace, I think, that the
sources that underpin our concept of the humanities, as a focus for our
thinking, are expected to be broadly inclusive." But, for himself, Spence
dismissed that notion in one more sentence: "...as a historian I have always
been drawn to the apparently small-scale happenings in circumscribed
settings, out of which we can tease a more expansive story."
Thus he dedicated the rest
of his lecture to the story of those three historical figures in the year
1687. Shen had traveled to Europe in the company of one of his teachers, a
Flemish Jesuit priest who was co-editing a book of the sayings of Confucius
from Chinese into Latin. Hyde, librarian at the University of Oxford's
Bodleian Library, invited Shen there to assist him with the cataloging of
some Chinese books -- and also because Hyde, who in that era would have been
called an Orientalist, wanted to learn Chinese himself. After a brief stay
at Oxford, Shen returned to London, bearing a letter of introduction from
Hyde to his friend Boyle; the letter recommended that Boyle meet and
converse with the Chinese scholar. The letter had to be convincing, Spence
explained, because Boyle's reputation was by then widespread, and "he was so
inundated with curious visitors that at times he had to withdraw into
self-enforced seclusion...."
Shen did meet Boyle at
least once; Boyle's work diary mentions their discussion of the Chinese
language and its scholars (a conversation that, like all of those between
Shen and Hyde, must have taken place in Latin: Shen's Latin was excellent,
but he did not, evidently, know English). And Hyde maintained correspondence
not only with his old friend Boyle -- over the years, the two had "discussed
Arabic and Persian texts, Malay grammars... and how to access books from
Tangier, Constantinople and Bombay" as well as "the chemical constituents of
sal ammoniac and amber, the effectiveness of certain Mexican herbs...
current studies of human blood and air, the nature of papyrus, the writings
of Ramon Llull and the use of elixirs and alchemy in the treatment of
illnesses" -- but also with Shen, until around the time of the latter's
departure from England for Portugal in the spring of 1688.The letters
between Shen and Hyde covered such topics as "Chinese vocabulary... China's
units of weights and measurements... the workings of the Chinese examination
system and bureaucracy... [and] the Chinese Buddhist belief in the
transmigration of souls."
"All three men," Spence
ultimately concluded, "though so different, shared certain basic ideas about
human knowledge: these included... the importance of linguistic precision,
the need for broad-based comparative studies, the role of clarity in
argument, the need for thorough scrutiny of philosophical and theological
principles.... Theirs, though brief, had been a real meeting of the minds.
And the values they shared remain, well over three hundred years later, the
kind that we can seek to practice even in our own hurried lives."
That final point was the
closest Spence came to suggesting a particular take-home message for his
audience; however, in an interview with Inside Higher Ed, held that
morning in the lobby of the Willard Hotel, he did mention a few ideas that
he was hoping to convey. For one thing, Spence said, given the current
importance of U.S.-China relations, he hopes this much older, smaller-scale
example of dialogue between the East and West will "give some perspective to
that."
"Historians," he said,
"try to get people away from just focusing on the present; they try to give
them some sort of stronger sense of continuity, human continuity. And I just
like the range of things, these three people that draw together, and they're
writing their letters to each other, and their few meetings... and in that
short time they talk about examination systems, they talk about language,
competition, they talk about medicine, they talk about -- I was fascinated,
they talk about chess..... All these things seemed to me to flow together,
and I think they'd make an interesting -- I hope they'd make an interesting
-- package about cultural contact."
There's a message in that,
Spence said: "to make our range of contact as wide as possible, and to use
our intelligence about how to do this."
Another issue raised in
the lecture, Spence said -- "maybe a small point, but perhaps worth making"
-- has to do with the teaching and learning of languages; Hyde dreamed of
bringing native speakers of various Eastern languages to Oxford, to
establish a college of languages. "Why should everybody else on the planet
speak English?" Spence asked. "I mean, why should they?"
But on the larger
importance of the humanities, and their current status in higher education
and society at large, Spence was reluctant to make a strong argument. "It's
not just a case of encouraging humanities in the abstract; it's having
something to say.... The main search should be for what is the most
meaningful thing you can achieve with the humanities, how can you share some
kind of broader cultural values, or how can you learn things about yourself
or other societies. The challenge is to use the humane intelligence and see
what can be built on that."
And when it comes to
funding, "any government has to put its priorities somewhere, and this does
usually mean cutting something."
His lecture, Spence said,
isn't "meant to be exactly a political speech, you know, I hope people
understand that."
For the most part, those
in attendance seemed more than satisfied. Spence's talk was punctuated
frequently by warm laughter from the audience -- whom he indulged
shamelessly, often departing from his prepared remarks to expound upon
details that interested him, or to make additional jokes whenever the crowd
found one of his remarks especially humorous. When he finished, the applause
was long and loud, and one woman remarked audibly, "That was amazing!"; her
companion replied, "Nice, really nice!"
But at least a few people
reacted with more ambivalence. One group of young attendees, who identified
themselves as fans of Spence, having been students of his as undergraduates
at Yale, said that while they'd enjoyed the lecture, they had been hoping
that Spence would make a more explicit connection between his topic and
issues of current cultural or political relevance. One noted that, in his
introductory remarks that evening, NEH Chairman James Leach had described
the purpose of the Jefferson Lecture as being "to narrow the gap between the
world of academia and public affairs," and had emphasized the Endowment's
goal of "bridging cultures."
There was an "irony," this
young man said, in the fact that Spence's lecture precisely addressed the
bridging of two cultures, but Spence hadn't made a bridge between his own
remarks -- which the audience member interpreted as "a clarion call for
better scholarship" -- and any other realm. "Listeners," he said (possibly
referring to himself), "want something that's cut and dry, that's tweetable."
The possibility of such
complaints about his speech had arisen during Inside Higher Ed's
interview with Spence that morning; he hadn't seemed concerned. "I'm not
going to sort of over-apologize to the audience... they've chosen to come to
hear about the seventeenth century" -- he chuckled -- "I think we announced
that!"
History of the CMA Examination and Revisions
October 30, 2010 message from James Martin
For an update and history of the CMA program see
VanZante, N. R. 2010. IMA's
professional certification program has changed. Management Accounting
Quarterly (Summer): 48-51.
or my summary of VanZante's article at
http://maaw.info/ArticleSummaries/ArtSumVanZante2010.htm
The information provided in this paper is very similar
to the information
provided by Brausch and Whitney earlier this year. However, VanZante adds a
chronological history of the CMA program and explains why the CFM exam was
discontinued and merged into the new CMA exam.
For more information see MAAW's professional exams section at
http://maaw.info/ProfessionalExamsMain.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on managerial accounting are at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#ManagementAccounting
Bob Jensen’s call for better research in the accounting academy ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/TheoryTAR.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting history are at
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2010/05/21/spence
February 22, 2011 message from Gary Mueller
Hi, Bob + Erika -
We didn't get around to putting together our usual
"annual report" this year. We did a fair bit of travel during the 2nd half
of 2010, had a number of family get-togethers, and time got away from us.
But thankfully we are reasonably healthy and well. Our major downsizing was
a pain, but now we are glad we tackled it in 2009. How are you both?
Hopefully you did not have to suffer through the cold, cold winter in the
N.E.
Since you are both quite family oriented, I thought
you might be interested in the completion of my professional biography by
Dale Flesher at Ole Miss. I am very happy with the outcome. So I am enclosed
the flyer about the book in the attachment hereto.
Be well and keep warm! Best greetings and regards,
Gary & Coralie
Jensen Comment
Although the above message from Gary Mueller is somewhat personal, I thought
readers might like to hear from Gary and to know about the recent biography
about Gary that was written by accounting historians Dale
Flesher and Gary Previts:
Gerhard G. Mueller: Father of International Accounting Education
By Dale L. Flesher and Gary Previts
Excerpts ---
Click Here
http://snipurl.com/Garymueller
http://books.google.com/books?id=AJVMGhLy-sEC&pg=PR9&lpg=PR9&dq=Flesher+Biography+%22Gerhard+Mueller%22&source=bl&ots=ke6Ixd4eYY&sig=caAPec9xbxIALLaj0pdfOXSW3Ww&hl=en&ei=2qBjTYD2JcSAlAeOmd3gCw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CBkQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=Flesher%20Biography%20%22Gerhard%20Mueller%22&f=false
Although I've known Gary and Coralie for years, we became much closer in the
years that we were both on the Executive Committee of the American Accounting
Association. Because there was significant outside funding for our EC meetings
in those years, we had some wonderful trips with spouses to places like
Amsterdam and
Puerto Rico and Hawaii. When we met outside the U.S., Gary usually had a
purpose. For example, when we met in Amsterdam he organized meetings where we
interacted with leaders of European accounting education. Gary had more global
contacts in accounting education than any person I've ever known other than the
very, very long term serving international accounting professor Paul Garner.
These were exciting times for the Executive Committee because it was a time when
the Big Eight accounting firms gave the AAA $4 million to establish the
Accounting Education Change Commission ---
http://aaahq.org/AECC/history/cover.htm
Gary Mueller was instrumental in organizing the entire AECC Program.
For
36 years when Gary was at the University of Washington he was arguably the
best known international accounting professor in the world. Gary grew up in
Germany and was fluent in several languages (including difficult German
dialects). In addition to his various books on international accounting, Gary
chaired the doctoral dissertations of some outstanding international accounting
students.
In addition to serving a AAA President, Gary was on the FASB for a full five
year appointment before he retired.
Gary served the accounting profession and the Academy very well and was a mover
and shaker in the globalization of accountancy.
My life is much richer for having served with Gary!
The Treviso Arithmetic on December 10,
1578, the first printed mathematics text,
published in Treviso, Italy, as Arte dell'Abbaco by an
unknown author---
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treviso_Arithmetic
Luca Pacioli: Author of the First Printed Work
(Summa)
in Algebra That Also Featured Algebraic Applications in Accountancy
Luca Pacioli was an Italian mathematician, Franciscan friar, collaborator
with Leonardo da Vinci, and an early contributor to the field now known as
accounting ---
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luca_Pacioli
Pacioli published several works on
mathematics, including:
·
Tractatus
mathematicus ad discipulos perusinos
(Ms. Vatican Library, Lat. 3129), a nearly 600-page textbook dedicated to
his students at the University of Perugia where Pacioli taught from 1477 to
1480. The manuscript was written between
December 1477
and 29 April 1478.
It contains 16 sections on merchant arithmetic, such as barter, exchange,
profit, mixing metals, and algebra, though 25 pages from the chapter on
algebra are missing. A modern transcription was published by Calzoni and
Cavazzoni (1996) along with a partial translation of the chapter on
partitioning problems.[7]
·
Summa de arithmetica, geometria.
Proportioni et proportionalita
(Venice
1494), a textbook
for use in the schools of Northern Italy. It was a synthesis of the
mathematical knowledge of his time and contained
the first printed work
on algebra
written in the vernacular (i.e.,
the spoken language of the day). It is also notable for including
one of the first published descriptions of the bookkeeping method that
Venetian merchants used during the Italian Renaissance,
known as the
double-entry accounting system. The
system he published included most of the accounting cycle as we know it
today. He described the use of journals and ledgers and warned that a person
should not go to sleep at night until the debits equalled the credits. His
ledger had accounts for assets (including receivables and inventories),
liabilities, capital, income, and expenses — the account categories that are
reported on an organization's
balance sheet and
income statement, respectively. He
demonstrated year-end closing entries and proposed that a
trial balance be used to prove a
balanced ledger. Additionally, his treatise touches on a wide range of
related topics from
accounting ethics to
cost accounting. He introduced the
Rule of 72, using an approximation of
100*ln 2 more than 100 years before
Napier and Briggs.[8]
·
De viribus
quantitatis
(Ms. Università degli Studi di Bologna, 1496–1508), a treatise on
mathematics and magic. Written between 1496 and 1508, it contains the first
reference to card tricks as well as guidance on how to juggle, eat fire, and
make coins dance. It is the first work to note that Leonardo was
left-handed. De viribus quantitatis is divided into three sections:
Mathematical problems, puzzles, and tricks, along with a collection of
proverbs and verses. The book has been described as the "Foundation of
modern magic and numerical puzzles," but it was never published and sat in
the archives of the University of Bologna, where it was seen by only a small
number of scholars during the Middle Ages. The book was rediscovered after
David Singmaster, a mathematician,
came across a reference to it in a 19th-century manuscript. An English
translation was published for the first time in 2007.[9]
·
Geometry
(1509),
a Latin translation of
Euclid's
Elements.
·
Divina proportione
(written in Milan in 1496–98, published in Venice in
1509). Two
versions of the original manuscript are extant, one in the Biblioteca
Ambrosiana in Milan, the other in the Bibliothèque Publique et Universitaire
in Geneva. The subject was mathematical and artistic proportion, especially
the mathematics of the
golden ratio and its application in
architecture.
Leonardo da Vinci drew the
illustrations of the regular solids in Divina proportione while he
lived with and took mathematics lessons from Pacioli. Leonardo's drawings
are probably the first illustrations of skeletal solids, which allowed an
easy distinction between front and back. The work also discusses the use of
perspective by painters such as
Piero della Francesca,
Melozzo da Forlì, and
Marco Palmezzano.
[b]
Jensen Comment
Although Pacioli printed applications of double-entry accounting the first
applications of double-entry accounting arose at an unknown time (probably in
ancient Rome) ---
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double-entry_bookkeeping_system
Accounting History
The September 2011 edition of The Accounting Review has some really
interesting biographical book reviews and tributes to historical scholars ---
Anthony Hopwood (Deceased)
Gerhard G. Mueller
George J. Benston (Deceased)
CHRISTOPHER S. CHAPMAN, DAVID J. COOPER, and PETER B. MILLER (editors),
Accounting, Organizations, and Institutions: Essays in Honour of Anthony Hopwood
(Oxford, U.K.: Oxford University Press, 2009, ISBN 978-0-19-954635-0, pp. xi,
441) ---
http://aaapubs.aip.org/getpdf/servlet/GetPDFServlet?filetype=pdf&id=ACRVAS000086000005001835000001&idtype=cvips&prog=normal&bypassSSO=1
This collection of essays memorializes the life and
work of Anthony Hopwood, a thought leader in management accounting research
who was renowned for developing communities of accounting scholars. These
essays, written by his students, co-authors, and colleagues, were presented
to Anthony in a conference of international researchers. Thus, they have
benefited from the counsel of the editors, from vigorous discussion among
conference participants, and from reactions by Anthony himself. Consistent
with Anthony’s distinguished career, in what may be his final research
endeavor he contributed to the creation of a collection of serious scholarly
works, worthy of consideration by all accounting researchers.
The volume is comprised of 18 chapters that
collectively cover themes that animated Anthony’s work. Chief among these is
the importance of studying accounting in the organizational and social
contexts in which it operates, with an aim of understanding how accounting
shapes and is shaped by its environment. In the introductory chapter, the
editors delineate a tripartite schema of accounting, organizations, and
institutions that guided their commissioning of pieces for the volume. Given
the title of the journal that Anthony founded and edited for decades,
Accounting, Organizations and Society (AOS), I wondered why the authors
chose ‘‘institutions’’ over ‘‘societies’’ as the third element of the
framework. In particular, I was curious about whether Anthony might in
hindsight have preferred this, acknowledging the growing importance and use
of institutional theory in accounting research. While the authors
acknowledge the limitations of adhering too literally to the framework in
light of indistinct conceptual boundaries (i.e., ‘‘to what extent is
accounting itself an ‘institution’?’’, p. 2), they nonetheless argue
convincingly for the usefulness of the framework in understanding a
significant body of research that has been published in journals such as:
AOS, Critical Perspectives on Accounting, and Accounting, Auditing and
Accountability Journal. In Chapter 1, the editors provide a nice history and
synthesis of these works. Although Anthony clearly played a major part in
the genesis and intellectual development of the literature, the chapter is
not a biographical sketch. It locates Anthony’s contributions in relation to
other management scholars and in the context of current events and
influential practitioner-led studies.
The editors conclude their history by reiterating
Anthony’s concern: that much of the current-day neglect of accounting by
social scientists stems from new modes of accountability in higher education
that have been made operational through simplified, standardized performance
metrics. Their hope is that these essays from ‘‘within and beyond’’ the
discipline of accounting will reinvigorate research on accounting in its
social context, and thereby address Anthony’s apprehension that ‘‘the only
consumers of accounting research are other accounting researchers’’ (p. 22).
Opting for a mix of ‘‘depth’’ strategy and ‘‘breadth’’ strategy for this
review, I have selected one of the 17 contributed chapters for extensive
comment and two others for brief summary.
Continued in article
DALE L. FLESHER,
Gerhard
G. Mueller: Father of International Accounting Education
(Bingley, U.K.: Emerald Group Publishing Limited,
2010, ISBN 978-0-85724-333-1, pp. x, 222).
Scroll Down to Page 1838
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A biography, the title of which anoints its subject
as the ‘‘Father of International Accounting Education,’’ raises two
immediate questions. First, what exactly is international accounting and,
second, what does it mean to be a ‘‘father’’ of an educational discipline?
The first question arises because it is not obvious
as to what is international about international accounting. After all, the
underlying concepts of accounting, like those of physics, are universal. The
principles of accounting articulated by Fr. Luca Pacioli (often referred to
as the ‘‘father of accounting’’) are no more confined to the boundaries of
Italy than are the principles of physics described by Galileo. Yet it is
doubtful that any academic physicists consider themselves specialists in
‘‘international physics.’’ ‘‘International accounting’’ is, at best, an
ill-defined sub-discipline of accounting. To many—and probably to most U.S.
accountants—international accounting is mainly a description of accounting
practices in countries other than the United States. Needless to say, that
definition would be unlikely to be embraced by our colleagues in those
‘‘other’’ countries. To others, international accounting deals primarily
with measurement and reporting issues involving currency translation and
related issues of consolidation. To still others, it pertains to the unique
problems of controlling and auditing the accounting systems of multinational
enterprises.
In his biography of Gerhard G. Mueller, Professor
Dale L. Flesher never explicitly answers that first question. Yet it is
apparent from the extraordinary length and breadth of Mueller’s publications
that international accounting incorporated almost anything that involved
entities outside of the United States. Indeed, he himself defined
international accounting as ‘‘the producing, exchanging, using, and
interpreting of accounting data across national borders’’ (p. 45).
As for the second question, what it means to be the
‘‘father’’ of international accounting education, Flesher concedes that
Mueller was certainly not its biological father; others both wrote about and
taught international accounting prior to him. But he leaves no doubt that
Mueller adopted the discipline and can take credit for nurturing it up to
adulthood.
. . .
Book review author Mike Granof states the following on Page 1841:
Flesher’s treatise leaves one significant question unanswered: Why has
Gerhard Mueller not yet been elected to the Accounting Hall of Fame?
Continued in article
JAMES D. ROSENFELD (editor), The Selected Works of George J. Benston: Volume
2, Accounting and Finance (New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2010, ISBN:
978- 0-19-538902-9, Vol. 2, pp. xviii, 426).
Scroll down to Page 1843
http://aaapubs.aip.org/getpdf/servlet/GetPDFServlet?filetype=pdf&id=ACRVAS000086000005001835000001&idtype=cvips&prog=normal&bypassSSO=1
This volume, which is edited by James D. Rosenfeld,
the late George Benston’s friend and colleague at Emory University, consists
of 16 articles arranged consecutively in two parts: nine accounting articles
and seven finance articles. I will discuss all nine accounting articles in
chronological order. I will then discuss two accounting articles that were
omitted from the volume that were more highly cited than eight of the nine
accounting articles included in the volume (source of citations:
scholar.google.com as of February 10, 2011). Before beginning my discussion
of the 11 articles, I opine that George Benston (hereafter, George) was one
of the few and last Renaissance men of our profession, making numerous
contributions to the accounting, finance, economics, and banking
literatures.1 Indeed, while I focus on his contributions to accounting,
George was best known for his expertise in banking, an area in which he was
often cited by The Economist. As additional evidence of his expertise in
banking, George was an Associate Editor of The Journal of Money, Credit, and
Banking.2
Volume 1 of this two-volume collection covers
George’s contributions to banking and financial services.
Continued in article
Jensen Comment
It saddens me that my friends Tony Hopwood and George Benston passed on. It
thrills me, however, to still correspond with Gary Mueller. I was honored to
serve on the Executive Committee when Gary was President of the American
Accounting Association. The task fell upon Gary's shoulders to set up the
Accounting Education Change Commission that received $4 million from the Big
Eight to fund change in accounting education. We chose Gary's then colleague
Gary Sundem to serve as CEO of the AECC.
Comparisons
of IFRS with Domestic Standards of Many Nations
http://www.iasplus.com/country/compare.htm
More Detailed
Differences
(Comparisons) between FASB and IASB Accounting Standards
2011 Update
"IFRS and US GAAP: Similarities and Differences" according to PwC
(2011 Edition)
http://www.pwc.com/us/en/issues/ifrs-reporting/publications/ifrs-and-us-gaap-similarities-and-differences.jhtml
Note the Download button!
Note that warnings are given throughout the document that the similarities and
differences mentioned in the booklet are not comprehensive of all similarities
and differences. The document is, however, a valuable addition to students of
FASB versus IASB standard differences and similarities.
It's not easy keeping track of what's changing and
how, but this publication can help. Changes for 2011 include:
- Revised introduction reflecting the current
status, likely next steps, and what companies should be doing now
(see page 2);
- Updated convergence timeline, including
current proposed timing of exposure drafts, deliberations, comment
periods, and final standards
(see page 7);
- More current analysis of the differences
between IFRS and US GAAP -- including an assessment of the impact
embodied within the differences
(starting on page 17); and
- Details incorporating authoritative standards
and interpretive guidance issued through July 31, 2011
(throughout).
This continues to be one of PwC's most-read
publications, and we are confident the 2011 edition will further your
understanding of these issues and potential next steps.
For further exploration of the similarities and
differences between IFRS and US GAAP, please also visit our
IFRS Video Learning Center.
To request a hard copy of this publication, please contact your PwC
engagement team or
contact us.
Jensen Comment
My favorite comparison topics (Derivatives and Hedging) begin on Page 158
The booklet does a good job listing differences but, in my opinion, overly
downplays the importance of these differences. It may well be that IFRS is more
restrictive in some areas and less restrictive in other areas to a fault. This
is one topical area where IFRS becomes much too subjective such that comparisons
of derivatives and hedging activities under IFRS can defeat the main purpose of
"standards." The main purpose of an "accounting standard" is to lead to greater
comparability of inter-company financial statements. Boo on IFRS in this topical
area, especially when it comes to testing hedge effectiveness!
One key quotation is on Page 165
IFRS does not specifically discuss the methodology
of applying a critical-terms match in the level of detail included within
U.S. GAAP.
Then it goes yatta, yatta, yatta.
Jensen Comment
This is so typical of when IFRS fails to present the "same level of detail" and
more importantly fails to provide "implementation guidance" comparable with the
FASB's DIG implementation topics and illustrations.
I have a
huge beef with the lack of illustrations in IFRS versus the many illustrations
in U.S. GAAP.
I have a
huge beef with the lack of illustrations in IFRS versus the many illustrations
in U.S. GAAP.
I have a huge beef with the lack of illustrations in
IFRS versus the many illustrations in U.S. GAAP.
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting standards setting controversies ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#MethodsForSetting
"Canadian regulator decides against allowing early adoption of recent
IFRSs by certain entities," IAS Plus, November 1, 2011 ---
http://www.iasplus.com/index.htm
. . .
In making its decision, the OSFI considered a
number of factors such as industry
consistency, OSFI policy positions on
accounting and capital, operational capacity and resource constraints of
Federally Regulated Entities (FREs), the ability to benefit from improved
standards arising from the financial crisis and the
notion of a level playing field with other Canadian
and international financial institutions.
OSFI concluded that FREs should not early adopt the following new or amended
IFRSs, but instead should adhere to their mandatory effective dates:
Continued
Jensen Comment
The clients, auditors, and the AICPA clamoring that U.S. firms should be able to
voluntarily choose IFRS instead of U.S. GAAP even before it has not been decided
that IFRS will ever replace FASB standards seem to ignore the problems that
voluntary choice of IFRS might cause for investors and analysts. The above
reasoning by the OSFI makes sense to me.
But then outfits like the AICPA have a self-serving interest in earning
millions of dollars selling IFRS training courses and materials.
November 2, 2011 reply from Patricia Walters
Does that mean you oppose options to early adopt standards in general,
not just IFRSs?
Pat
November 2, 2011 reply from Bob Jensen
Hi Pat,
It's hard to say regarding early adoption of a particular national or
international standard, because there can be unique circumstances. For
example, FAS 123R simply altered how to make disclosures rather than alter
the disclosures themselves since employee option expenses had to be
disclosed before the FAS 123R adoption date. But even here early adoption of
FAS 123R by Company A versus late adoption by Company B made simple
comparisons of eps and P/E ratios between these companies less easy.
There's a huge difference between early adoption of a particular standard
and early adoption of an entire system of standards like switching from FASB
accounting standards to IFRS.
I think the Canadian position of early adoption of IFRS is probably correct
because of the mess early adoption of IFRS makes with comparisons of
companies using different accounting standards and the added costs of
regulation of more than one set of standards. Also think of the added burden
placed upon the courts to adjudicate disputes when differing sets of
standards are being used.
Even though we allow IFRS for SEC registered foreign companies, I think it
would be a total mess for the SEC, the PCAOB, investors, analysts,
educators, trainers, auditing, and even the IRS (where tax and reporting
treatments must sometimes be reconciled) if our domestic corporations could
choose between FASB versus IASB standards.
There are hundreds of differences between FASB and IASB standards. Allowing
companies domestic companies to cherry pick which system they choose before
it is even known if there will ever be official replacement of FASB
standards by IASB standards would be very, very confusing. What if there
never is a decision to replace FASB standards? Do want to simply allow
companies to choose to bypass FASB standards at their own discretion?
Of course, if information were costless it might be ideal to require
financial reporting where FASB and IASB outcomes are reconciled. But clients
and auditors generally contend that the cost of doing this greatly exceeds
benefits. And teaching financial accounting would become exceedingly
complicated if we had to teach two sets of standards on an equal basis.
I would certainly hate to face a CPA examination that had nearly equal
coverage of both FASB and IASB standards simultaneously. I say this
especially after viewing the hundreds of pages of complicated differences
between the two standards systems.
Respectfully,
Bob Jensen
Comparisons
of IFRS with Domestic Standards of Many Nations
http://www.iasplus.com/country/compare.htm
More Detailed
Differences
(Comparisons) between FASB and IASB Accounting Standards
2011 Update
"IFRS and US GAAP: Similarities and Differences" according to PwC
(2011 Edition)
http://www.pwc.com/us/en/issues/ifrs-reporting/publications/ifrs-and-us-gaap-similarities-and-differences.jhtml
Note the Download button!
Note that warnings are given throughout the document that the similarities and
differences mentioned in the booklet are not comprehensive of all similarities
and differences. The document is, however, a valuable addition to students of
FASB versus IASB standard differences and similarities.
It's not easy keeping track of what's changing and
how, but this publication can help. Changes for 2011 include:
- Revised introduction reflecting the current
status, likely next steps, and what companies should be doing now
(see page 2);
- Updated convergence timeline, including
current proposed timing of exposure drafts, deliberations, comment
periods, and final standards
(see page 7);
- More current analysis of the differences
between IFRS and US GAAP -- including an assessment of the impact
embodied within the differences
(starting on page 17); and
- Details incorporating authoritative standards
and interpretive guidance issued through July 31, 2011
(throughout).
This continues to be one of PwC's most-read
publications, and we are confident the 2011 edition will further your
understanding of these issues and potential next steps.
For further exploration of the similarities and
differences between IFRS and US GAAP, please also visit our
IFRS Video Learning Center.
To request a hard copy of this publication, please contact your PwC
engagement team or
contact us.
Jensen Comment
My favorite comparison topics (Derivatives and Hedging) begin on Page 158
The booklet does a good job listing differences but, in my opinion, overly
downplays the importance of these differences. It may well be that IFRS is more
restrictive in some areas and less restrictive in other areas to a fault. This
is one topical area where IFRS becomes much too subjective such that comparisons
of derivatives and hedging activities under IFRS can defeat the main purpose of
"standards." The main purpose of an "accounting standard" is to lead to greater
comparability of inter-company financial statements. Boo on IFRS in this topical
area, especially when it comes to testing hedge effectiveness!
One key quotation is on Page 165
IFRS does not specifically discuss the methodology
of applying a critical-terms match in the level of detail included within
U.S. GAAP.
Then it goes yatta, yatta, yatta.
Jensen Comment
This is so typical of when IFRS fails to present the "same level of detail" and
more importantly fails to provide "implementation guidance" comparable with the
FASB's DIG implementation topics and illustrations.
I have a
huge beef with the lack of illustrations in IFRS versus the many illustrations
in U.S. GAAP.
I have a
huge beef with the lack of illustrations in IFRS versus the many illustrations
in U.S. GAAP.
I have a huge beef with the lack of illustrations in
IFRS versus the many illustrations in U.S. GAAP.
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting standards setting controversies ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#MethodsForSetting
"Canadian regulator decides against allowing early adoption of recent
IFRSs by certain entities," IAS Plus, November 1, 2011 ---
http://www.iasplus.com/index.htm
. . .
In making its decision, the OSFI considered a
number of factors such as industry
consistency, OSFI policy positions on
accounting and capital, operational capacity and resource constraints of
Federally Regulated Entities (FREs), the ability to benefit from improved
standards arising from the financial crisis and the
notion of a level playing field with other Canadian
and international financial institutions.
OSFI concluded that FREs should not early adopt the following new or amended
IFRSs, but instead should adhere to their mandatory effective dates:
Continued
Jensen Comment
The clients, auditors, and the AICPA clamoring that U.S. firms should be able to
voluntarily choose IFRS instead of U.S. GAAP even before it has not been decided
that IFRS will ever replace FASB standards seem to ignore the problems that
voluntary choice of IFRS might cause for investors and analysts. The above
reasoning by the OSFI makes sense to me.
But then outfits like the AICPA have a self-serving interest in earning
millions of dollars selling IFRS training courses and materials.
November 2, 2011 reply from Patricia Walters
Does that mean you oppose options to early adopt standards in general,
not just IFRSs?
Pat
November 2, 2011 reply from Bob Jensen
Hi Pat,
It's hard to say regarding early adoption of a particular national or
international standard, because there can be unique circumstances. For
example, FAS 123R simply altered how to make disclosures rather than alter
the disclosures themselves since employee option expenses had to be
disclosed before the FAS 123R adoption date. But even here early adoption of
FAS 123R by Company A versus late adoption by Company B made simple
comparisons of eps and P/E ratios between these companies less easy.
There's a huge difference between early adoption of a particular standard
and early adoption of an entire system of standards like switching from FASB
accounting standards to IFRS.
I think the Canadian position of early adoption of IFRS is probably correct
because of the mess early adoption of IFRS makes with comparisons of
companies using different accounting standards and the added costs of
regulation of more than one set of standards. Also think of the added burden
placed upon the courts to adjudicate disputes when differing sets of
standards are being used.
Even though we allow IFRS for SEC registered foreign companies, I think it
would be a total mess for the SEC, the PCAOB, investors, analysts,
educators, trainers, auditing, and even the IRS (where tax and reporting
treatments must sometimes be reconciled) if our domestic corporations could
choose between FASB versus IASB standards.
There are hundreds of differences between FASB and IASB standards. Allowing
companies domestic companies to cherry pick which system they choose before
it is even known if there will ever be official replacement of FASB
standards by IASB standards would be very, very confusing. What if there
never is a decision to replace FASB standards? Do want to simply allow
companies to choose to bypass FASB standards at their own discretion?
Of course, if information were costless it might be ideal to require
financial reporting where FASB and IASB outcomes are reconciled. But clients
and auditors generally contend that the cost of doing this greatly exceeds
benefits. And teaching financial accounting would become exceedingly
complicated if we had to teach two sets of standards on an equal basis.
I would certainly hate to face a CPA examination that had nearly equal
coverage of both FASB and IASB standards simultaneously. I say this
especially after viewing the hundreds of pages of complicated differences
between the two standards systems.
Respectfully,
Bob Jensen
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting standard setting controversies ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#MethodsForSetting
Before you read the article below you may want to scan the classic Baruch
Lecture by Bob Elliott at
http://www.baruch.cuny.edu/library/alumni/online_exhibits/digital/saxe/saxe_1998/elliott_98.htm
"Corporate Reporting Needs a Reboot," by Paul Druckman, Harvard
Business Review Blog, April 17, 2013 ---
Click Here
http://blogs.hbr.org/cs/2013/04/corporate_reporting_needs_a_re.html?referral=00563&cm_mmc=email-_-newsletter-_-daily_alert-_-alert_date&utm_source=newsletter_daily_alert&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=alert_date
There is a clamor of voices
demanding the rebooting of capitalism, from academics (such as Michael
Porter) and politicians (like Al Gore) to investors (such as CalPERS)
and Occupy's street activists.
The common thread is
that today's model of capitalism overemphasizes short-term financial
data and neglects information that gets at the true sources of
sustainable value creation — things like innovation, brand equity,
customer loyalty, and key stakeholder relationships. Corporate reporting
today emphasizes compliance, boilerplate and legalese. As a result, we
have a massive glut of filings, press releases, analyst reports and
articles focused on financial data. The system has lost sight of the
point of reporting: to give companies access to financial capital by
communicating their value to investors.
The consequence of the
systemic failure of this lopsided model is that companies focus on
short-term financial performance — because that is what they believe
investors are interested in — to the detriment of long-term value
creation. Investors, meanwhile, compensate for the lack of knowledge
about issues central to longer term value by pricing in a risk premium.
This can result in market valuations that do not reflect the fundamental
performance or prospects of the business, leading to a misallocation of
capital and reduced visibility for investors, reinforcing short-term
decision-making. And it is business that pays the price through more
expensive capital, while furthering a flawed model of capitalism.
Fortunately, there is a
better way to communicate about the sources of value creation:
integrated reporting. Such reporting integrates material information
about a firm's financial performance with information on sustainability
performance and intangibles such as intellectual and human capital.
From the investor
standpoint, integrated reporting provides insights about a firm's
business model, strategy, risk, performance and prospects that are
simply not available under the current reporting model. It therefore
supports investor decision-making by providing a more complete basis for
dialogue with the company's board and an assessment of present and
future value. This benefits not only the investor, but also investors'
beneficiaries and the broader economy by providing a platform that
encourages financial stability. Companies such as Danone, SAP, AkzoNobel
and Unilever are already pushing the boundaries on their corporate
reporting in this direction.
This week, the
International Integrated Reporting Council (of which I am the chief
executive) launched the
consulting draft of integrated reporting framework.
Over the next ninety days, the IIRC is seeking
feedback on the draft from companies, investor groups, reporting
standards organizations, accounting bodies and regulators — anybody who
has a stake in seeing the transformation of corporate reporting.
The framework differs
from standard financial reporting in a number of ways:
- It provides
guidance on reporting that goes beyond simply conveying past
performance in order to help investors understand how value is
created (or destroyed) in the company, given its business model and
its strategies, risks and opportunities.
- It acknowledges
that financial capital is not the only asset in a business that
drives value creation; instead, a business must report on the
interaction of six different types of capital: financial,
manufactured, intellectual, human, social and relationship, and
natural.
- It demands that
reporting go beyond being simply a mash-up of a firm's existing
reports, or a forced combination of the financial and sustainability
reports. Instead, it is a concise report that concentrates on
material issues — those relevant to investors — that affect the
firm's strategy and future orientation.
Despite the evidence of
green shoots representing a new pathway for corporate reporting, I don't
believe that true integrated reporting exists anywhere just yet.
However, the new framework gets us closer to that goal.
While all this makes me
hopeful for the future of corporate reporting, one dark cloud hangs over
my outlook: US companies are lagging their European, Asian and Latin
American counterparts in moving towards an integrated reporting model.
Of course, we have great examples of US companies, such as Coca Cola,
Prudential Finance and Clorox, joining around ninety global companies in
IIRC's pilot program right now, alongside dozens of investors. But my
concern is that there are deep-rooted reasons why the US environment may
stifle innovation in corporate reporting.
One is that companies
hesitate to make statements about anticipated future performance because
they fear litigation. But there are other reasons too. Many see
reporting as a compliance issue — if it's not legislated, then don't
bother. And some will only move on this when they believe the majority
of investors want this sort of information.
The danger for US firms
who lag in adopting integrated reporting is twofold: not only will their
investors lack complete information about their performance, but they
also will lose out on the integrated thinking that integrated reporting
drives: it reduces barriers between functional silos, aligns data
systems and processes, and encourages a culture that focuses on the full
spectrum of value drivers. This is all about innovation, and I am
saddened to think that US companies, some of the world's most innovative
businesses in their own right, might be held back because they are stuck
in an out-of-date reporting model.
If integrated reporting
can play its role in better corporate performance, holistic investor
engagement and the proliferation of a longer-term model of capitalism,
it will not have come a moment too soon.
Jensen Comment
I really hate being a luddite, but if corporate reporting is to be expanded to
cover the entire ballpark as suggested in the above article, then don't look for
the accounting profession to carry the ball into the new territories of
corporate reporting.
In fairness, Paul Druckman did not propose that the accounting profession
expand to cover these new corporate reporting territories. But in this era of
rebranding of PwC and other multinational CPA firms to offer expertise in
non-accounting areas it's tempting to think CPA firms can rebrand in corporate
reporting of "brand equity, customer loyalty, and key
stakeholder relationships."
In the accounting profession we've been through this before. The AICPA even
proposed a new professional designation that became the joke of the 20th Century
---- the professional certification of a Cognitor (later changed to XYZ).
http://www.journalofaccountancy.com/Issues/2001/Oct/TheXyzCredential
Also see
http://www.journalofaccountancy.com/Issues/2001/May/CpasSpeakUpOnNewGlobalCredential
Accountants are educated and trained to do what they learn in accounting
education programs. They are generally not trained to become experts in "innovation,
brand equity, customer loyalty, and key stakeholder relationships."
Unless they have a lot more education and training outside accountancy they are
not IT experts or valuation experts.
This takes me
back to the days when Bob Elliott, eventually as President of the AICPA, was
proposing great changes in the profession, including SysTrust, WebTrust,
Eldercare Assurance, etc. For years I used Bob’s AICPA/KPMG videos as starting
points for discussion in my accounting theory course. Bob relied heavily on the
analogy of why the railroads that did not adapt to innovations in transportation
such as Interstate Highways and Jet Airliners went downhill and not uphill. The
railroads simply gave up new opportunities to startup professions rather than
adapt from railroading to transportation.
Bob’s underlying
assumption was that CPA firms could extend assurance services to non-traditional
areas (where they were not experts but could hire new kinds of experts) by
leveraging the public image of accountants as having high integrity and
professional responsibility. That public image was destroyed by the many
auditing scandals, notably Enron and the implosion of Andersen, that surfaced in
the late 1990s and beyond ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm
This is a 1998 lecture
given by Bob Eliott before his world (the lofty public perception of CPA firm
integrity) collapsed ---
http://www.baruch.cuny.edu/library/alumni/online_exhibits/digital/saxe/saxe_1998/elliott_98.htm
The AICPA
commenced initiatives on such things as Systrust. To my knowledge most of these
initiatives bit the dust, although some CPA firms might be making money by
assuring Eldercare services.
The counter
argument to Bob Elliot’s initiatives is that CPA firms had no comparative
advantages in expertise in their new ventures just as railroads had few
comparative advantages in trucking and airline transportation industries,
although the concept of piggy backing of truck trailers eventually caught on.
I still have
copies of Bob’s great VCR tapes, but I doubt that these have ever been
digitized. Bob could sell refrigerators to Eskimos.
Should Double Entry Accounting be Abandoned?
It would seem that, if the constraint of double-entry bookkeeping is removed
as a basis of financial reporting, the operational definitions of the major
performance indicator of "profit" for for-profit businesses will have to become
much more precise and operational than "profit" is presently defined as a
residual phenomenon in a double-entry bookkeeping system.
In recent communications Tom Selling suggested that accounting might be
improved by deleting the historic constraint of double entry bookkeeping for
financial reporting.
An earlier advocate of this was Cox Bonita in the following reference:
Accountability lost: the rise and fall of double entry
Omega
Volume 31, Issue 4, August 2003, Pages 303–310
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0305048303000483
Abstract
This paper discusses the need for modern accounting
systems to meet the criteria of both ‘accountability’ and ‘usefulness’ and
argues that the traditional double entry book keeping system serves as a
constraint on the achievement of system usefulness. We look at the problems
associated with the double entry book keeping system and argue for its
replacement with an events accounting system (EAS) model which is more
appropriate to current business requirements. We also consider the need to
extend the EAS model to more adequately meet the criterion of system
usefulness. It is suggested that the integration of an EAS approach with
that of a strategic information systems planning approach, facilitates the
meeting of this objective.
Jensen Comment
Due to tradition, functional fixation (and whatever else) financial
analysts and investors want a primary index for tracking performance a company's
performance over time and to compare inter-company performances. Net profit
throughout accounting history since the days before Pacioli serves this purpose.
Net profit became the most-tracked index of business performance without ever
being formally defined. Before
Other Comprehensive Income (OCI) was invented in FAS 130 net profit
was the change in equity that's left (a positive or negative residual) after
changes in defined components of liabilities and equities other than retained
earnings are eliminated under a double entry system.
In my opinion OCI was initially invented in anticipation of FAS 133 so that
changes in value of derivative contracts serving as cash flow and FX hedges do
not impact net profit to the extent that the hedges
are effective. Of course some other items are also posted to OCI (or AOCI)
---
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accumulated_other_comprehensive_profit#Other_comprehensive_profit
Tom Selling is so critical of the OCI concept I suspect that he'd like to take
this "quagmire" back out of accounting standards when defining net profit.
Tom Selling would like to define profit in terms of changes in values of
assets and liabilities along Hicksian lines, but this is not an operational
definition without more precise definitions of assets, liabilities, and values.
The standard setters (IASB and FASB) define profit in terms of revenues minus
expenses, but this is not an operational definition without precise definitions
of revenues and expenses.
Accounting standard setters readily admit that they do not have an
operational definition of profit and other important financial definitions.
The IASB just undertook a five-year effort to define profit more operationally.
From the CFO Journal's Morning Ledger on May 8, 201
The largest U.S. companies are booking their strongest
quarterly profits in five years,
as firms reap the benefits of years of belt tightening and finally see a
pickup in demand. But part of the improvement has come from keeping a lid on
spending, and many CEOs remain reluctant to change and open their wallets
for new projects, plants and people,
Thomas Gryta and Theo Francis write.
Profits at S&P 500 companies jumped an estimated 13.9% in the first quarter,
growing nearly twice as fast as revenue. The gains stretched across
industries, from Wall Street’s banks to Silicon Valley’s web giants, and
were helped by a rebound in the battered energy sector. The picture was a
marked improvement from a year ago, when profits fell 5%, and was the best
performance since the third quarter of 2011.
ensen Comment
Accounting standard setters cannot even operationally define the calculation of
earnings other than to make it a plug that makes the balance sheet balance. And
yet this plug remains as an exceedingly important driver of share prices in the
stock markets.
The Double-Entry Bookkeeping Model is Crucial for Being Able to Calculate
Some Items That Can Only Be Defined as Plug Amounts That Make Balance Sheets
Balance
1.
Net income is defined by both the FASB and IASB as a plug figure that makes
balance sheets balance under double-entry bookkeeping. In some ways computing
the net income plug amount is like the Hicksian economic concept of income,
although it really is not Hicksian income due to the many ways of measuring
various balance-sheet components of assets and liabilities in modern-day
mixed-model measuring systems. Also there are "assets" and "liabilities" in the
Hicksian model that accountants cannot measure for balance sheet accounts such
as some intangibles (think the value of human resources and business
reputations), contingent liabilities, etc.
2.
Purchasing power gains or losses on monetary items are computed as a
double-entry-based plug amounts.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constant_purchasing_power_accounting
Suppose all balance sheet items are partitioned into monetary versus
non-monetary items. Non-monetary items are those items having value changes that
move with general price levels (think inflation). Examples include real estate,
equipment, variable rate investments, and variable rate debt.
Monetary items include cash on hand, fixed rate receivables/investments, and
fixed rate debt. Some derivative financial items on the balance sheet are
monetary items and some are non-monetary. Interest rate swaps are commonly used
to hedge monetary gains and losses. Monetary items are subject to purchasing
power gains and losses. Firms minimize holdings of monetary assets in highly
inflationary economies like Venezuela where monetary holdings are a disaster.
Firms often experience some monetary asset losses in mildly inflationary
economies. They also experience purchasing power gains on monetary liabilities
such as long-term fixed-rate mortgages.
In my theory courses I used a tabbed Excel workbook to illustrate the
calculation of monetary-item gains and losses as plug figures ---
www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/Excel/wtdcase2a.xls
Especially note the Answers tab.
3.
Exit value accounting replaces accrual accounting GAAP when accounting for
personal estates and non-going concerns. ---
Scroll Down to Exit Value at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#BasesAccounting
In some ways computing exit value
net income plug amount is like the Hicksian economic concept of income (a plug
calculation), although it really is not Hicksian income due to the many ways of
measuring various balance-sheet components of assets and liabilities in
modern-day mixed-model measuring systems. Also there are "assets" and
"liabilities" in the Hicksian model that accountants cannot measure for balance
sheet accounts such as some intangibles (think the value of human resources and
business reputations), contingent liabilities, etc.
In my theory courses I used a tabbed Excel workbook to illustrate the
calculation of exit value net earnings as a plug vfubure. ---
www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/Excel/wtdcase2a.xls
Especially note the Answers tab.
4.
Entry
value (replacement cost) accounting replaces accrual accounting GAAP when
accounting for personal estates and non-going concerns. ---
Scroll Down to Entry Value at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#BasesAccounting
In some ways computing exit value
net income plug amount is like the Hicksian economic concept of income (a plug
calculation) , although it really is not Hicksian income due to the many ways of
measuring various balance-sheet components of assets and liabilities in
modern-day mixed-model measuring systems. Also there are "assets" and
"liabilities" in the Hicksian model that accountants cannot measure for balance
sheet accounts such as some intangibles (think the value of human resources and
business reputations), contingent liabilities, etc.
Unlike exit values, entry (replacement costs) are not really "values" since
entry value accounting is subject to arbitrary accrual adjustments (think
depreciation) just like historical costs.
In my theory courses I used a tabbed Excel workbook to illustrate the
calculation of exit value net earnings as a plug vfubure. ---
www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/Excel/wtdcase2a.xls
Especially note the Answers tab.
From the CFO Journal's Morning Ledger on May 5, 2017
Avon under pressure
Avon Products Inc.
Chief Executive Sheri McCoy faces new pressure following a surprise loss
that sent the cosmetics seller’s stock tumbling
Thursday.
Jensen Comment
Accounting standard setters cannot even operationally define the calculation of
earnings other than to make it a plug that makes the balance sheet balance. And
yet this plug remains as an exceedingly important driver of share prices in the
stock markets.
May 9, 2017 Question from Tom Selling
I’d like to brush up on the shortcomings of
Hicksian “income” for measuring the earnings of a business entity. Do
you (or anyone else on AECM, of course) have a reference (e.g., an article
or book chapter) to help me out?
May 9, 2017 Reply from Bob Jensen
John Hicks ---
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Hicks#Contributions_to_interpretation_of_income_for_accounting_purposes
There are numerous references given at
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Hicks#Contributions_to_interpretation_of_income_for_accounting_purposes
Here is one of references that I recommend that are in the accounting
literature. The main take away here is that fair value accounting takes us
closer to the Hicksian concept of income at the expense of reliability. I
might note that Professor Schipper over the years is a proponent of falr
value accounting. This is not a defense of historical cost accounting as
might have been written by AC Littleton or Yuji Ijiri.
"Earnings Quality," by Katherine Schipper and Linda Vincent, ACCOUNTING
HORIZONS Supplement 2003 pp. 97-110 ---
http://s3.amazonaws.com/academia.edu.documents/35504067/Schipper_image.pdf?AWSAccessKeyId=AKIAIWOWYYGZ2Y53UL3A&Expires=1494285864&Signature=BaLCa00HRPvplwgY2ee8Dmr7gzU%3D&response-content-disposition=inline%3B%20filename%3DEarnings_Quality.pdf
Especially note the references at the end of the commentary.
The main problem is that Hicksian Income in theory assumes all changes is
"wealth" or "well offness" where wealth includes much more than accountants
put on balance sheets. Examples include the many intangibles and contingent
liabilities that are left off balance sheets due to inability to measure
reliably such as the value of human resources and changes thereof. Also
accountants have never figured out how to measure the requisite "value in
use: as opposed to disposal value in a yard sale.
Bob Jensen
It would seem that, if the constraint of double-entry bookkeeping is removed as
a basis of financial reporting, the operational definitions of the major
performance indicator of "profit" for for-profit businesses will have to become
much more precise and operational than "profit" is presently defined as a
residual phenomenon in a double-entry bookkeeping system.
I think that the Hicksian concept of income and the Hicksian demand
functions, like Pareto optimality in general, are weak concepts defined mostly
for mathematical convenience that are not really very good guidelines for
real-world standard setters ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hicksian_demand_function
Also see
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hicks_optimality
Some alternative approaches to income suggested by
Hicks and by other writers and their relevance to conceptual frameworks for
accounting
"Hicksian Income in the Conceptual Framework" ---
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1576611
Michael Bromwich London School of Economics
Richard H. Macve London School of Economics & Political Science (LSE) -
Department of Accounting and Finance
Shyam Sunder Yale School of Management
March 22, 2010
Abstract:
In seeking to replace accounting ‘conventions’ by ‘concepts’ in the pursuit
of principles-based standards, the FASB/IASB joint project on the conceptual
framework has grounded its approach on a well-known definition of ‘income’
by Hicks. We welcome the use of theories by accounting standard setters and
practitioners, if theories are considered in their entirety.
‘Cherry-picking’ parts of a theory to serve the immediate aims of standard
setters risks distortion. Misunderstanding and misinterpretation of the
selected elements of a theory increase the distortion even more. We argue
that the Boards have selectively picked from, misquoted, misunderstood, and
misapplied Hicksian concepts of income. We explore some alternative
approaches to income suggested by Hicks and by other writers, and their
relevance to current debates over the Boards’ conceptual framework and
standards. Our conclusions about how accounting concepts and conventions
should be related differ from those of the Boards. Executive stock options (ESOs)
provide an illustrative case study.
IASB Plans Overhaul of
Financial Definitions
http://blogs.wsj.com/cfo/2016/11/02/iasb-plans-overhaul-of-financial-definitions/?mod=djemCFO_h
The International
Accounting Standards Board, or IASB, which sets reporting standards in more
than 120 countries, said Wednesday it would look at providing new
definitions of common financial terms such as earnings before interest and
taxes, or ebit.
The new definitions
will be introduced over the next five years, in order to provide sufficient
time for suggestions and comment from market participants.
The changes will not
result in new standards but will require the board to overhaul existing
ones.
At the moment, terms
like operating profit are not defined by the IASB. The aim is to help market
participants judge the suitability of a particular investment.
“We want to give
investors the right handles to look at a balance sheet,” said IASB chairman
Hans Hoogervorst.
Up until now,
International Financial Reporting Standards, known as IFRS, leave companies
too much flexibility in defining such terms, which often makes it difficult
to compare financials, Mr. Hoogervorst said.
“Even within sectors,
there is a lack of comparability,” Mr. Hoogervorst said. This affects both
investors and companies, he added.
It is too early to tell
what the changes will mean for companies reporting under IFRS, according to
Mr. Hoogervorst. “They should be less revolutionary than the introduction of
new standards but every change results in work”, he said.
Some firms might find
that they have less latitude when reporting financial results, he said. That
could mean more work.
Firms that decide
against adopting the new IASB definition for ebit, for example, could be
required to reconcile their own ebit calculation into one based on the
IASB’s definition.
The IASB in 2017 also
plans to finalize a single accounting model that would be applied to all
forms of insurance contracts.
Besides that, the board
will work on updating the system through which filers add disclosures to the
electronic versions of their financial statements. The system is updated on
a regular basis and the IASB produces an annual compilation of all changes
each year.
Bob
Jensen's threads on conceptual framework controversies ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#ConceptualFrameworks
Jensen Comment
It would seem that, if the constraint of double-entry bookkeeping is removed as
a basis of financial reporting, the operational definitions of the major
performance indicator of "profit" for for-profit businesses will have to become
much more precise and operational than "profit" is presently defined as a
residual phenomenon in a double-entry bookkeeping system.
History of Women in Accounting and Other Women in the World
Judith Drake (scholar on barriers to women in physical and mental work,
including accounting) ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judith_Drake
Eight Special Women of Accounting ---
http://www.journalofaccountancy.com/Issues/2007/Aug/EightSpecialWomenInAccounting.htm
Among the AICPA-donated volumes at Ole Miss
are two binders containing photographs of individuals appearing in the
JofA or at accounting conventions from 1887 to 1979. Of the 446
individuals featured, eight are women—Christine Ross, Ellen Libby Eastman,
Miriam Donnelly, Mary E. Murphy, Helen Lord, Helen H. Fortune, Mary E. Lewis
and Beth M. Thompson. In a time when the profession was the
all-but-exclusive domain of men, they stood out not only because of their
gender but in many cases because of their accomplishments and contributions
to accounting. Consider that in 1933, slightly more than 100 CPA
certificates had been issued to women. By 1946, World War II had changed
traditional notions of gender in the workplace, and female CPAs had more
than tripled to 360—still a small contingent but, as information gleaned
from the AICPA Library indicates, one capable of exerting a strong and
beneficial influence on the profession.
Christine Ross
Born about 1873 in Nova Scotia, Ross took New York by storm in the late
1890s. New York state enacted licensure legislation in 1896 and gave its
inaugural CPA exam in December 1896. Ross sat for the exam in June 1898,
scoring second or third in her group. Six to 18 months elapsed while her
certificate was delayed by state regents because of her gender. But she had
completed the requirements and became the first woman CPA in the United
States, receiving certificate no. 143 on Dec. 21, 1899.
Ross began practicing accounting around
1889. For several years, she worked for Manning’s Yacht Agency in New York.
Her clients included women’s organizations, wealthy women and those in
fashion and business.
Helen Lord
Lord received her CPA certificate from New York in 1934 and in 1935 joined
the American Society of Certified Public Accountants, which merged with the
American Institute of Accountants (later AICPA) the following year. In 1937,
she was a partner with her father in the New York firm of Lord & Lord and a
member of the AIA. She served in the late 1940s as business manager of
The Woman CPA, published by the American Woman’s Society of Certified
Public Accountants–American Society of Women Accountants. Lord reported the
journal then had a circulation of more than 2,200.
Helen Hifner Fortune
Fortune, one of the first women CPAs in Kentucky, received certificate no.
174 in 1935 and was admitted to the AIA the following year. She became a
member of an AIA committee in 1942 and by 1947 was a partner in the
Lexington, Ky., firm of Hifner and Fortune.
Ellen Libby Eastman
Eastman began her career as a clerk in a Maine lumber company, eventually
becoming chief accountant. She studied for the CPA exam at night and became
the first woman CPA in Maine, receiving certificate no. 37 dated 1918. She
was also the first woman to establish a public accounting practice in New
England. Arriving in New York in 1920, Eastman focused on tax work and
audited the accounts of the American Women’s Hospital in Greece. In 1925,
she was a member of the ASCPA. In 1940, Eastman began working with the law
firm of Hawkins, Delafield & Longfellow in New York.
She was outspoken and eloquent regarding a
woman’s ability to succeed in accounting. In a 1929 article in The
Certified Public Accountant, Eastman recounted her adventures:
One must be willing and able to endure
long and irregular hours, unusual working arrangements and difficult travel
conditions. I have worked eighteen out of the twenty-four hours of a day
with time for but one meal; I have worked in the office of a bank president
with its mahogany furnishings and oriental rugs and I have worked in the
corner of a grain mill with a grain bin for a desk and a salt box for a
chair; I have been accorded the courtesy of the private car and chauffeur of
my client and have also walked two miles over the top of a mountain to a
lumber camp inaccessible even with a Ford car. I have ridden from ten to
fifteen miles into the country after leaving the railroad, the only
conveyance being a horse and traverse runners—and this in the severity of a
New England winter. I have done it with a thermometer registering fourteen
degrees below zero and a twenty-five mile per hour gale blowing. I have
chilled my feet and frozen my nose for the sake of success in a job which I
love. I have been snowbound in railroad stations and have been stranded five
miles from a garage with both rear tires of my car flat. I have ridden into
and out of open culvert ditches with the workmen shouting warnings to me.
And always one must keep the appointment; “how” is not the client’s concern.
Mary E. Murphy
A long-lived pioneer, Murphy (1905–1985) lectured, researched and taught in
the United States and abroad, retiring in 1973. The Iowa native earned her
bachelor of commerce degree with a major in accounting from the University
of Iowa in 1927, then obtained a master’s in accountancy in 1928 from
Columbia University Business School. In 1938, she received a doctorate in
accountancy—only the second woman in the United States to do so—from the
London School of Economics.
In 1928, Murphy began working in the New York office of Lybrand, Ross Bros.
& Montgomery. Two years later, she took the CPA exam in Iowa and received
certificate no. 67, to become the first woman CPA in Iowa. She joined the
AIA in 1937.
Following her public accounting stint, she
served for three years as the chair of the Department of Commerce at St.
Mary’s College in Notre Dame, Ind. Murphy also was an assistant professor of
economics at Hunter College of the City University of New York until 1951.
In 1952, she received the first Fulbright professorship of accounting, with
assignments in Australia and New Zealand. In 1957, she was appointed as the
first director of research of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in
Australia. Murphy retired in 1973 from the accounting faculty at California
State University.
She published or collaborated on more than
20 books and 100 journal articles and many book reviews and scholarly
papers. From 1946 to 1965 she was the most frequently published author in
The Accounting Review. Murphy investigated the role of accounting
in the economy, made the case for accounting education improvements and
paved the way for other aspiring women accountants to prosper. More than
half her publications explored international accounting, often advocating
standardization. She also emphasized accounting history and biographies.
Mary E. Lewis
Lewis received California CPA certificate no. 1404 in 1939. She was admitted
to the AIA that year and by 1947 had her own firm in Los Angeles.
Beth M. Thompson
Thompson worked as the office manager in the Kentucky Automobile Agency she
and her husband, Charles R. Thompson, owned. After closing the car business,
they moved to Florida, where she worked for an accounting firm. She passed
the CPA exam in 1951 with the encouragement of her husband and opened her
own accounting business in Miami. In 1955, Thompson was one of only 900
women CPAs and the only female president of a state association chapter—the
Dade County chapter of the Florida Institute of CPAs.
Miriam Donnelly
From 1949 to 1955, Donnelly was head librarian of the AIA library. (In 1957,
the AIA was renamed the AICPA.) She began her career with the library as
assistant librarian and cataloger in 1927, after working for two
governmental libraries and the New York Public Library.
History of women accountants in the 1880. US Federal Census ---
http://repository.usfca.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1001&context=acct
Christine Ross (The First Woman CPA) ---
Click Here
http://books.google.com/books?id=W8Z2a53DJ2cC&pg=PA151&lpg=PA151&dq=%22First+Woman+CPA%22&source=bl&ots=irXssMWzFN&sig=0AneWv1qO-MB6_ixatHq-mMerRQ&hl=en&sa=X&ei=N8o8UY3XBYrK0AHngoCYBw&ved=0CDgQ6AEwAQ#v=onepage&q=%22First%20Woman%20CPA%22&f=false
Mary Jo McCann (First Woman CPA in Kansas) ---
http://www.kscpa.org/about/news/119-mary_jo_mccann_first_woman_cpa_in_kansas_passes
Bertha Aldrich (First Woman CPA in California) ---
http://boards.ancestry.com/surnames.aldrich/600/mb.ashx
Accounting Reform (search for women) ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accounting_reform
American Society of Women Accountants ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University_of_Cambridge#Women.27s_education
Accounting and Financial Women's Alliance ---
http://www.afwa.org/
Accounting History Libraries at the University of Mississippi (Ole Miss) ---
http://www.olemiss.edu/depts/accountancy/libraries.html
There are many items pertaining to accounting women in history, especially
in the Accounting Historians Journal
Ruth Andersen, First Woman on the Board of a Big Four Accounting Firm ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruth_Anderson_%28accountant%29
Erma Bombeck (a termite control accountant at an advertising agency) ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erma_Bombeck
Cynthia Cooper (Internal auditor who blew the whistle at WorldCom) ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cynthia_Cooper_%28accountant%29
Lynn Brewer was never enough of a player to even mention in my threads on the
Enron scandal
The foul-mouthed Sherron Watkins was the significant whistleblower at Enron
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudEnronQuiz.htm#10
Grace Andrews (early mathematician and accountant in Barnard College) ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grace_Andrews_%28mathematician%29
Patricia Courtney (IRS agent and professional baseball star) ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patricia_Courtney
Patrecia Barringer (Tax accountant, auditor, and professional baseball star)
---http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patricia_Barringer
Helen Nordquist (Telephone operator, accountant, and professional baseball
star) ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helen_Nordquist
Rita Lee (Accounting Student Tennis Star) ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Janet_Lee
Diane Cummins (Canadian Accountant Track Star) ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diane_Cummins
Sue Hearnshaw (British Chartered Accountant and Long Jump Star) ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sue_Hearnshaw
Betty Wagner Spandikow (Accountant Who Became an Advocate of Breast Feeding)
---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Betty_Wagner_Spandikow
Jennifer Archer (Oil and Gas Accountant Turned Fiction Writer) ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jennifer_Archer
Women in Business ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_business
American Business Women Association ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Business_Women%27s_Association
9 to 5 Film ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/9_to_5_%28musical%29
Career Women ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Career_woman
A History of Entrereneurship
"Who Are The Entrepreneurs: The Elite or the Everyday Man? A History of
Entrepreneurship," by Heather A. Haveman, Jacob Habinek, and Leo A
Googman, UC Berkeley, 2011 ---
http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/392635v2;jsessionid=00ECE18AD2472F4956AAF2D00CC2132E#page-2
Who
Are The Entrepreneurs: The Elite or the Everyday Man? A History of
Entrepreneurship
China's Tiger Women Billionaires ---
http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2012/03/04/amy-chua-profiles-four-female-tycoons-in-china.html
"Liz Claiborne Must Say Adieu to Liz," by: Dana Mattioli, The Wall Street
Journal, October 13, 2011 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970203914304576626711202553884.html?mod=djem_jiewr_AC_domainid
"New Questions on Women, Academe and Careers," by Scott Jaschik,
Inside Higher Ed, September 22, 2008 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2008/09/22/women
Barbara Franklin (one of the first graduates of the Harvard Business School)
---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barbara_Franklin
History of Feminism ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_feminism
Also see
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mich%C3%A8le_Pujol
National Organization for Women (NOW) ---
http://www.now.org/
For example, search for "Accounting" in the search box
Women's Work ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women%27s_work
Teachers, Accountants, and Physician Women as Slaves in Ancient Rome ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slavery_in_ancient_Rome
Conduct Literature for Women, 1500-1640, eds. William St Clair &
Irmgard Maassen (6 Volumes) (London: Pickering and Chatto, 2000).
Conduct Literature for Women, 1640-1710, eds. William St Clair &
Irmgard Maassen (6 Volumes) (London: Pickering and Chatto, 2002).
History of Women in the United States ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_women_in_the_United_States
The Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in
America ---
http://www.radcliffe.harvard.edu/schlesinger-library
Women's suffrage in the United Kingdom ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women%27s_suffrage_in_the_United_Kingdom
By Popular Demand: "Votes for Women" Suffrage Pictures, 1850-1920 ---
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/vfwhtml/vfwhome.html
Women's Rights ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women%27s_rights
Title 15 of the United States Code ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Title_15_of_the_United_States_Code
Title 9 of the United States Code ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Title_9_of_the_United_States_Code
Women's Sports ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women%27s_sports
Famous Women in History ---
http://www.historynet.com/famous-women-in-history
National Women's Hall of Fame ---
http://www.greatwomen.org/
Note that some states also have hall of fame sites for women inductees
Women in Islam ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special:Search&limit=20&offset=120&redirs=1&profile=default&search=Women+in+Accounting
Sharia (search for the sections pertaining to women) ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sharia
Women's Rights Movement in Iran ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women%27s_rights_movement_in_Iran
Women in Saudi Arabia ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saudi_Arabia
Women in Libya ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_Libya
Geisha ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geisha
Women of Singapore ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_Singapore
Women's Roles in World Wars ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women%27s_roles_in_the_World_Wars
Women in the Military ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_the_military
Yugoslav Partisans ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yugoslav_Partisans
The story of women bomber pilots from the Women's Auxiliary Ferrying Squadron
---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ladies_Courageous
Rosie the Riveter ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rosie_the_Riveter
Victorian Dress Reform ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victorian_dress_reform
Women's Educational and Industrial Union ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women%27s_Educational_and_Industrial_Union H
Women in Science ---
http://womeninscience.history.msu.edu/
Discovering American Women's History Online ---
http://digital.mtsu.edu/cdm/landingpage/collection/women
International Museum of Women
http://www.imow.org/home/
Women in Scotland ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Dundee
Also see
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_early_modern_Scotland
Helena Marfell, First President of the Country Women's Association of
Australia ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helena_Marfell
Women and Mormanism ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_and_Mormonism
WomenWatch: UN Information and Resources on Gender Equality and Empowerment
---
http://www.un.org/womenwatch/
Sophia Smith Collection: Women's History Archives at Smith College ---
http://www.smith.edu/libraries/libs/ssc/digitalcoll.html
Wisconsin Women's History ---
http://womenst.library.wisc.edu/bibliogs/wis-women-history.html
Women in Prison ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicole_Hahn_Rafter
Women in Prison Film ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WIP
Women in the Ku Klux Klan ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ku_Klux_Klan
Women on Death Row ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capital_punishment_debate_in_the_United_States
Gifts of Speech: Women's Speeches from Around the World ---
http://gos.sbc.edu/
Women's Legal History ---
http://wlh.law.stanford.edu/
The Frances Perkins Center ---
http://francesperkinscenter.org/
Chicago Women's Liberation Union Herstory Project ---
http://www.cwluherstory.org/
David Foster Wallace’s 1994 Syllabus: How to Teach Serious
Literature with Lightweight Books ---
Click Here
http://www.openculture.com/2013/02/david_foster_wallaces_1994_syllabus.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+OpenCulture+%28Open+Culture%29
National Women's History Project
http://www.nwhp.org/
African-American Women: Online Archival Collections ---
http://library.duke.edu/rubenstein/collections/digitized/african-american-women/
Women Artists of the American West ---
http://www.cla.purdue.edu/WAAW/MainIndex.html
Women's Colleges ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women%27s_colleges
Women at Harvard ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harvard_University#Women
Radcliff College---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radcliffe_College
Cambridge University ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University_of_Cambridge#Women.27s_education
Society of Women's Health Research ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Society_for_Women%27s_Health_Research
Films Made by Women ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women%27s_cinema
Lesbian Pulp Fiction ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lesbian_pulp_fiction
Smithsonian Education: Women's History Teaching Resources
http://www.smithsonianeducation.org/educators/resource_library/women_resources.html
Teaching with Historic Places: Women's History Lesson Plans ---
http://www.nps.gov/nr/twhp/mar99.htm
Algerian Women in France ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Algerian_women_in_France
Barack Obama Supreme Court Candidates ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barack_Obama_Supreme_Court_candidates
Women in India ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_India
Women in Saudi Arabia ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saudi_Arabia
Women in Libya ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_Libya
Feminism in Thailand ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feminism_in_Thailand
Women in Taiwan ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_Taiwan
Gender Inequality in China ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gender_inequality_in_China
China's Tiger Woman Billionaires ---
http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2012/03/04/amy-chua-profiles-four-female-tycoons-in-china.html
Gender Pay Gap in Russia ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gender_pay_gap_in_Russia
Economic Inequality ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economic_inequality
Gender Pay Gap ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gender_pay_gap
From the Scout Report on March 1, 2013
The movement for equal pay for women continues to gain steam across the
United States
Equal pay for women battle gains traction in New York
http://www.metro.us/newyork/news/local/2013/02/21/equal-pay-for-women-battle-gains-traction-in-new-york/
Getting equal pay could become easier for women
http://www.abqjournal.com/main/2013/02/26/politics/legislature/getting-equal-pay-could-become-easier-for-women.html
State Senator Wendy Davis Wants to Bring Federal Fair Pay Laws for Women to
Texas
http://blogs.dallasobserver.com/unfairpark/2013/02/state_sen_wendy_davis_wants_to.php
Wage gaps destroy employee morale, productivity
http://www.leaderpost.com/business/productiveconversations/Wage+gaps+destroy+employee+morale+productivity/8018636/story.html?__lsa=d85d-e6d9
Here We Go Again: The Long (and Frustrating) Journey of Equal Pay for Women
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/marlo-thomas/equal-pay-for-women_b_2678611.html
Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act of 2009
http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/PLAW-111publ2/html/PLAW-111publ2.htm
I hope Jim K will comment on how "research in business schools is becoming
increasingly distanced from the reality of business"
"In 2008 Hopwood commented on a number of issues," by Jim Martin, MAAW
Blog, June 26, 2013 ---
http://maaw.blogspot.com/2013/06/in-2008-hopwood-commented-on-number-of.html
The first issue below is related to the one
addressed by Bennis and O'Toole. According to Hopwood, research in
business schools is becoming increasingly distanced from the reality of
business. The worlds of practice and research have become ever more
separated. More and more accounting and finance researchers know less and
less about accounting and finance practice. Other professions such as
medicine have avoided this problem so it is not an inevitable development.
Another issue has to do with the status of
management accounting. Hopwood tells us that the term management accountant
is no longer popular and virtually no one in the U.S. refers to themselves
as a management accountant. The body of knowledge formally associated with
the term is now linked to a variety of other concepts and job titles. In
addition, management accounting is no longer an attractive subject to
students in business schools. This is in spite of the fact that many
students will be working in positions where a knowledge of management
control and systems design issues will be needed. Unfortunately, the present
positioning and image of management accounting does not make this known.
Continued in article
June 29, 2013 reply from Zane Swanson
Hi Bob,
A key word of incentive comes up as it relates to
the practitioner motivator of the nature of accounting and financing
research. The AICPA does give an educator award at the AAA convention and so
it isn't as though the practitioners don't care about accounting
professorship activity.
Maybe, the "right"' type of incentive needs to be
designed. For example, it was not so many years ago that firms developed
stock options to align interests of management and investors. Perhaps, a
similar option oriented award could be designed to align the interests of
research professors and practitioners. Theoretically, practitioners could
vest a set of professors for research publications in a pool for a
particular year and then grant the exercise of the option several years
later with the attainment of a practitioner selected goal level (like HR
performance share awards). This approach could meet your calls to get
researchers to write "real world" papers and to have follow up replications
to prove the point.
However, there are 2 road blocks to this approach.
1 is money for the awards. 2 is determining what the practitioner
performance features would be.
You probably would have to determine what
practitioners want in terms of research or this whole line of discussion is
moot.
The point of this post is: Determining research
demand solely by professors choices does not look like it is addressing your
"real world" complaints.
Respectfully,
Zane
June 29, 2013 reply from Bob Jensen
Hi Zane,
I had a very close friend (now dead) in the Engineering Sciences
Department at Trinity University. I asked him why engineering professors
seemed to be much closer to their profession than many other departments in
the University. He said he thought it was primarily that doctoral students
chose engineering because they perhaps were more interested in being problem
solvers --- and their profession provided them with an unlimited number of
professional problems to be solved. Indeed the majority of Ph.D. graduates
in engineering do not even join our Academy. The ones that do are not a
whole lot different from the Ph.D. engineers who chose to go into industry
except that engineering professors do more teaching.
When they take up research projects, engineering professors tend to be
working with government (e.g., the EPA) and and industry (e.g., Boeing) to
help solve problems. In many instances they work on grants, but many
engineering professors are working on industry problems without grants.
In contrast, accounting faculty don't like to work with practitioners to
solve problems. In fact accounting faculty don't like to leave the campus to
explore new problems and collect data. The capital markets accounting
researchers purchase their databases and them mine the data. The behavioral
accounting researchers study their students as surrogates for real world
decision makers knowing full well that students are almost always poor
surrogates. The analytical accounting researchers simply assume the world
away. They don't set foot off campus except to go home at night. I know
because I was one of them for nearly all of my career.
Academic accounting researchers submit very little original research work
to journals that practitioners read. Even worse a hit in an accounting
practitioner journal counts very little for promotion and tenure especially
when the submission itself may be too technical to interest any of our AAA
journal editors, e.g., an editor told me that the AAA membership was just
not interested in technical articles on valuing interest rate swaps, I had
to get two very technical papers on accounting for derivative financial
instruments published in a practitioner journal (Derivatives Reports)
because I was told that these papers were just too technical for AAA journal
readers.
Our leading accountics science researchers have one goal in mind ---
getting a hit in TAR, JAR, or JAE or one of the secondary academic
accounting research journals that will publish accountics research. They
give little or no priority to finding and helping to solve problems that
practitioners want solved. They have little interest in leaving the ivory
tower to collect their own messy real-world data.
Awards and even research grants aren't the answer to making accounting
professors more like engineering, medical, and law professors. We need to
change the priorities of TAR, JAR, JAE, and other top academic accounting
research journals where referees ask hard questions about how the practice
of the profession is really helped by the research findings of virtually all
submitted articles.
In short, we need to become better problem solvers in a way like
engineering, medical, and law professors are problem solvers on the major
problems of their professions. A great start would be to change the
admissions criteria of our top accounting research journals.
Respectfully,
Bob Jensen
Avoiding applied research for practitioners and failure to attract practitioner
interest in academic research journals ---
"Why business ignores the business schools," by Michael Skapinker
Some ideas for applied research ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#AcademicsVersusProfession
Essays on the (mostly sad) State of Accounting Scholarship ---
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/temp/AccounticsDamn.htm#Essays
Sue Haka, former AAA President, commenced a thread on the AAA Commons
entitled
"Saving Management Accounting in the Academy,"
---
http://commons.aaahq.org/posts/98949b972d
A succession of comments followed.
The latest comment (from James Gong) may be of special interest to some of
you.
Ken Merchant is a former faculty member from Harvard University who form many
years now has been on the faculty at the University of Southern California.
Here are my two cents. First, on the teaching side,
the management accounting textbooks fail to cover new topics or issues. For
instance, few textbooks cover real options based capital budgeting, product
life cycle management, risk management, and revenue driver analysis. While
other disciplines invade management accounting, we need to invade their
domains too. About five or six years ago, Ken Merchant had written a few
critical comments on Garrison/Noreen textbook for its lack of breadth. Ken's
comments are still valid. Second, on the research and publication side,
management accounting researchers have disadvantage in getting data and
publishing papers compared with financial peers. Again, Ken Merchant has an
excellent discussion on this topic at an AAA annual conference.
Bob Jensen's threads on what went wrong in the Accounting Academy
How did academic accounting research become a pseudo science?
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#WhatWentWrong ---
June 30, 2013 reply from Zane Swanson
Hi Bob,
You have expressed your concerns articulately and passionately. However,
in terms of creating value to society in general, your "action plan" of
getting the "top" of the profession (editors) to take steps appears
unlikely. As you pointed out, the professors who create articles do it with
resources immediately under their control in the most expeditious fashion in
order to get tenure, promotion and annual raises. The editors take what
submissions are given. Thus, it is an endless cycle (a closed loop, a
complete circle). As you noted the engineering profession has different
culture with a "make it happen" objective real world. In comparison with
accounting, the prospect of "only" accounting editors from the top dictating
research seems questionable. Your critique suggests that the "entire"
accounting research culture needs a paradigm shift of real world action
consequences in order to do what you want. The required big data shift is
probably huge and is a reason that I suggested starting an options alignment
mechanism of interests of practitioners and researchers.
Respectfully,
Zane
June 30, 2013 reply from Bob Jensen
You may be correct that a paradigm
shift in accountics research is just not feasible given the
generations of econometrics, psychometrics. and mathematical
accountics researchers that virtually all of the North American
doctoral programs have produced.
I think Anthony Hopwood, Paul Williams, and
others agree with you that it will take a paradigm shift that just is
not going to happen in our leading journals like TAR, JAR, JAE, CAR,
etc. Paul, however, thinks we are making some traction, especially since
virtually all AAA presidents since Judy Rayburn have made appeals fro a
paradigm shift plus the strong conclusions of the Pathways Commission
Report. However, that report seems to have fallen on deaf ears as far as
accountics scientists are concerned.
Other historical scholars like Steve Zeff, Mike
Granfof, Bob Kaplan, Judy Rayburn, Sudipta Basu, and think that we can wedge
these top journals to just be a bit more open to alternative research
methods like were used in the past when practitioners took a keen interest
in TAR and even submitted papers to be published in TAR --- alternative
methods like case studies, field studies, and normative studies without
equations.
"We fervently
hope that the research pendulum will soon swing back from the narrow lines
of inquiry that dominate today's leading journals to a rediscovery of the
richness of what accounting research can be. For that to occur, deans and
the current generation of academic accountants must
give it a push."
Granof and Zeff ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/TheoryTAR.htm#Appendix01
Michael H. Granof is a professor of accounting at the McCombs School of
Business at the University of Texas at Austin. Stephen A. Zeff is a
professor of accounting at the Jesse H. Jones Graduate School of Management
at Rice University.
Accounting Scholarship that
Advances Professional Knowledge and Practice
Robert S. Kaplan
The Accounting Review, March 2011, Volume 86, Issue 2,
Recent
accounting scholarship has used statistical analysis on asset prices,
financial reports and disclosures, laboratory experiments, and surveys
of practice. The research has studied the interface among accounting
information, capital markets, standard setters, and financial analysts
and how managers make accounting choices. But as accounting scholars
have focused on understanding how markets and users process accounting
data, they have distanced themselves from the accounting process itself.
Accounting scholarship has failed to address important measurement and
valuation issues that have arisen in the past 40 years of practice. This
gap is illustrated with missed opportunities in risk measurement and
management and the estimation of the fair value of complex financial
securities. This commentary encourages accounting scholars to devote
more resources to obtaining a fundamental understanding of contemporary
and future practice and how analytic tools and contemporary advances in
accounting and related disciplines can be deployed to improve the
professional practice of accounting. ©2010 AAA
The
videos of the three plenary speakers at the 2010 Annual Meetings in San
Francisco are now linked at
http://commons.aaahq.org/hives/531d5280c3/posts?postTypeName=session+video
I think the video is only available to AAA members.
Hi David,
Separately and independently, both
Steve Kachelmeier (Texas) and Bob Kaplan (Harvard) singled out
the Hunton and Gold (2010) TAR article as being an excellent
paradigm shift model in the sense that the data supposedly was
captured by practitioners with the intent of jointly working
with academic experts in collecting and analyzing the data
---
If that data had subsequently not been
challenged for integrity (by whom is secret) that Hunton and Gold
(2010) research us the type of thing we definitely would like to see
more of in accountics research.
Unfortunately, this excellent example may
have been a bit like Lance Armstrong being such a winner because he did
not playing within the rules.
For Jim Hunton maybe the world did
end on December 21, 2012
"Following Retraction, Bentley
Professor Resigns," Inside Higher Ed, December 21, 2012 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/quicktakes/2012/12/21/following-retraction-bentley-professor-resigns
James E. Hunton, a
prominent accounting professor at Bentley University, has resigned
amid an investigation of the retraction of an article of which he
was the co-author, The Boston Globe reported. A spokeswoman cited
"family and health reasons" for the departure, but it follows the
retraction of an article he co-wrote in the journal Accounting
Review. The university is investigating the circumstances that led
to the journal's decision to retract the piece.
An Accounting Review Article
is Retracted
One of the
article that Dan mentions has been retracted, according to
http://aaajournals.org/doi/abs/10.2308/accr-10326?af=R
Retraction: A Field
Experiment Comparing the Outcomes of Three Fraud Brainstorming
Procedures: Nominal Group, Round Robin, and Open Discussion
James E. Hunton,
Anna Gold Bentley University and Erasmus University Erasmus
University This article was originally published in 2010 in The
Accounting Review 85 (3) 911–935; DOI:
10/2308/accr.2010.85.3.911
The authors
confirmed a misstatement in the article and were unable to provide
supporting information requested by the editor and publisher.
Accordingly, the article has been retracted.
Jensen Comment
The TAR article retraction in no way detracts from this study being a
model to shoot for in order to get accountics researchers more involved
with the accounting profession and using their comparative advantages to
analyze real world data that is more granulated that the usual practice
of beating purchased databases like Compustat with econometric sticks
and settling for correlations rather than causes.
Respectfully,
Bob Jensen
FASB Conceptual Framework ---
http://www.fasb.org/jsp/FASB/FASBContent_C/ProjectUpdatePage&cid=900000011090
The objective of the conceptual framework project
is to develop an improved conceptual framework that provides a sound
foundation for developing future accounting standards. Such a framework is
essential to fulfilling the Board’s goal of developing standards that are
principles based, internally consistent, and that lead to financial
reporting that provides the information capital providers need to make
decisions in their capacity as capital providers. The new FASB framework
will build on the existing framework.
"FASB’s proposed 2015 GAAP taxonomy available
for comment," by Ken Tysiac, Journal of Accountancy, August 29, 2014
---
http://www.journalofaccountancy.com/News/201410855.htm
To access the proposed taxonomy go to (requires login permission and password)
http://www.fasb.org/jsp/FASB/Page/LandingPage&cid=1176164131053
Note the FAQs link
IASB Conceptual Framework ---
http://www.ifrs.org/current-projects/iasb-projects/conceptual-framework/Pages/Conceptual-Framework-Summary.aspx
The Conceptual Framework sets out the concepts that
underlie the preparation and presentation of financial statements. It is a
practical tool that assists the IASB when developing and revising IFRSs. The
objective of the Conceptual Framework project is to improve financial
reporting by providing the IASB with a complete and updated set of concepts
to use when it develops or revises standards.
ASBJ Conceptual Framework ---
http://www.ifrs.org/Meetings/MeetingDocs/ASAF/2015/March/ASAF 1503 02C CF
Questions.pdf
This I've got to see
The standard setters' (IASB and FASB) balance sheet priority over the income
statement totally destroyed the concepts of "income" and "earnings."
I'm anxiously awaiting to see the IASB's operational definition of "earnings"
underlying the forthcoming definition of EBIT, etc.
One of my main concerns in this definition is the jumbling of legally earned
revenues with unrealized value changes.
From the CFO Journal's Morning Ledger on May 8, 201
The largest U.S. companies are booking their strongest
quarterly profits in five years,
as firms reap the benefits of years of belt tightening and finally see a
pickup in demand. But part of the improvement has come from keeping a lid on
spending, and many CEOs remain reluctant to change and open their wallets
for new projects, plants and people,
Thomas Gryta and Theo Francis write.
Profits at S&P 500 companies jumped an estimated 13.9% in the first quarter,
growing nearly twice as fast as revenue. The gains stretched across
industries, from Wall Street’s banks to Silicon Valley’s web giants, and
were helped by a rebound in the battered energy sector. The picture was a
marked improvement from a year ago, when profits fell 5%, and was the best
performance since the third quarter of 2011.
ensen Comment
Accounting standard setters cannot even operationally define the calculation of
earnings other than to make it a plug that makes the balance sheet balance. And
yet this plug remains as an exceedingly important driver of share prices in the
stock markets.
From the CFO Journal's Morning Ledger on May 5, 2017
Avon under pressure
Avon Products Inc.
Chief Executive Sheri McCoy faces new pressure following a surprise loss
that sent the cosmetics seller’s stock tumbling
Thursday.
Jensen Comment
Accounting standard setters cannot even operationally define the calculation of
earnings other than to make it a plug that makes the balance sheet balance. And
yet this plug remains as an exceedingly important driver of share prices in the
stock markets.
May 9, 2017 Question from Tom Selling
I’d like to brush up on the shortcomings of
Hicksian “income” for measuring the earnings of a business entity. Do
you (or anyone else on AECM, of course) have a reference (e.g., an article
or book chapter) to help me out?
May 9, 2017 Reply from Bob Jensen
John Hicks ---
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Hicks#Contributions_to_interpretation_of_income_for_accounting_purposes
There are numerous references given at
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Hicks#Contributions_to_interpretation_of_income_for_accounting_purposes
Here is one of references that I recommend that are in the accounting
literature. The main take away here is that fair value accounting takes us
closer to the Hicksian concept of income at the expense of reliability. I
might note that Professor Schipper over the years is a proponent of falr
value accounting. This is not a defense of historical cost accounting as
might have been written by AC Littleton or Yuji Ijiri.
"Earnings Quality," by Katherine Schipper and Linda Vincent, ACCOUNTING
HORIZONS Supplement 2003 pp. 97-110 ---
http://s3.amazonaws.com/academia.edu.documents/35504067/Schipper_image.pdf?AWSAccessKeyId=AKIAIWOWYYGZ2Y53UL3A&Expires=1494285864&Signature=BaLCa00HRPvplwgY2ee8Dmr7gzU%3D&response-content-disposition=inline%3B%20filename%3DEarnings_Quality.pdf
Especially note the references at the end of the commentary.
The main problem is that Hicksian Income in theory assumes all changes is
"wealth" or "well offness" where wealth includes much more than accountants
put on balance sheets. Examples include the many intangibles and contingent
liabilities that are left off balance sheets due to inability to measure
reliably such as the value of human resources and changes thereof. Also
accountants have never figured out how to measure the requisite "value in
use: as opposed to disposal value in a yard sale.
Bob Jensen
It would seem that, if the constraint of double-entry bookkeeping is removed as
a basis of financial reporting, the operational definitions of the major
performance indicator of "profit" for for-profit businesses will have to become
much more precise and operational than "profit" is presently defined as a
residual phenomenon in a double-entry bookkeeping system.
I think that the Hicksian concept of income and the Hicksian demand
functions, like Pareto optimality in general, are weak concepts defined mostly
for mathematical convenience that are not really very good guidelines for
real-world standard setters ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hicksian_demand_function
Also see
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hicks_optimality
Some alternative approaches to income suggested by
Hicks and by other writers and their relevance to conceptual frameworks for
accounting
"Hicksian Income in the Conceptual Framework" ---
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1576611
Michael Bromwich London School of Economics
Richard H. Macve London School of Economics & Political Science (LSE) -
Department of Accounting and Finance
Shyam Sunder Yale School of Management
March 22, 2010
Abstract:
In seeking to replace accounting ‘conventions’ by ‘concepts’ in the pursuit
of principles-based standards, the FASB/IASB joint project on the conceptual
framework has grounded its approach on a well-known definition of ‘income’
by Hicks. We welcome the use of theories by accounting standard setters and
practitioners, if theories are considered in their entirety.
‘Cherry-picking’ parts of a theory to serve the immediate aims of standard
setters risks distortion. Misunderstanding and misinterpretation of the
selected elements of a theory increase the distortion even more. We argue
that the Boards have selectively picked from, misquoted, misunderstood, and
misapplied Hicksian concepts of income. We explore some alternative
approaches to income suggested by Hicks and by other writers, and their
relevance to current debates over the Boards’ conceptual framework and
standards. Our conclusions about how accounting concepts and conventions
should be related differ from those of the Boards. Executive stock options (ESOs)
provide an illustrative case study.
IASB Plans Overhaul of
Financial Definitions
http://blogs.wsj.com/cfo/2016/11/02/iasb-plans-overhaul-of-financial-definitions/?mod=djemCFO_h
The International
Accounting Standards Board, or IASB, which sets reporting standards in more
than 120 countries, said Wednesday it would look at providing new
definitions of common financial terms such as earnings before interest and
taxes, or ebit.
The new definitions
will be introduced over the next five years, in order to provide sufficient
time for suggestions and comment from market participants.
The changes will not
result in new standards but will require the board to overhaul existing
ones.
At the moment, terms
like operating profit are not defined by the IASB. The aim is to help market
participants judge the suitability of a particular investment.
“We want to give
investors the right handles to look at a balance sheet,” said IASB chairman
Hans Hoogervorst.
Up until now,
International Financial Reporting Standards, known as IFRS, leave companies
too much flexibility in defining such terms, which often makes it difficult
to compare financials, Mr. Hoogervorst said.
“Even within sectors,
there is a lack of comparability,” Mr. Hoogervorst said. This affects both
investors and companies, he added.
It is too early to tell
what the changes will mean for companies reporting under IFRS, according to
Mr. Hoogervorst. “They should be less revolutionary than the introduction of
new standards but every change results in work”, he said.
Some firms might find
that they have less latitude when reporting financial results, he said. That
could mean more work.
Firms that decide
against adopting the new IASB definition for ebit, for example, could be
required to reconcile their own ebit calculation into one based on the
IASB’s definition.
The IASB in 2017 also
plans to finalize a single accounting model that would be applied to all
forms of insurance contracts.
Besides that, the board
will work on updating the system through which filers add disclosures to the
electronic versions of their financial statements. The system is updated on
a regular basis and the IASB produces an annual compilation of all changes
each year.
Bob
Jensen's threads on conceptual framework controversies ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#ConceptualFrameworks
Jensen Comment
It would seem that, if the constraint of double-entry bookkeeping is removed as
a basis of financial reporting, the operational definitions of the major
performance indicator of "profit" for for-profit businesses will have to become
much more precise and operational than "profit" is presently defined as a
residual phenomenon in a double-entry bookkeeping system.
From the CFO Journal's Morning Ledger
on November 3, 2016
IASB evaluating EBIT
The International Accounting Standards Board said
Wednesday it would look at providing new
definitions of common financial terms such as earnings before interest and
taxes, or ebit. The new definitions will be introduced over the next five
years, in order to provide sufficient time for suggestions and comment from
market participants, Nina Trentmann reports.
IASB Plans Overhaul of Financial Definitions
http://blogs.wsj.com/cfo/2016/11/02/iasb-plans-overhaul-of-financial-definitions/?mod=djemCFO_h
The International Accounting Standards Board, or
IASB, which sets reporting standards in more than 120 countries, said
Wednesday it would look at providing new definitions of common financial
terms such as earnings before interest and taxes, or ebit.
The new definitions will be introduced over the
next five years, in order to provide sufficient time for suggestions and
comment from market participants.
The changes will not result in new standards but
will require the board to overhaul existing ones.
At the moment, terms like operating profit are not
defined by the IASB. The aim is to help market participants judge the
suitability of a particular investment.
“We want to give investors the right handles to
look at a balance sheet,” said IASB chairman Hans Hoogervorst.
Up until now, International Financial Reporting
Standards, known as IFRS, leave companies too much flexibility in defining
such terms, which often makes it difficult to compare financials, Mr.
Hoogervorst said.
“Even within sectors, there is a lack of
comparability,” Mr. Hoogervorst said. This affects both investors and
companies, he added.
It is too early to tell what the changes will mean
for companies reporting under IFRS, according to Mr. Hoogervorst. “They
should be less revolutionary than the introduction of new standards but
every change results in work”, he said.
Some firms might find that they have less latitude
when reporting financial results, he said. That could mean more work.
Firms that decide against adopting the new IASB
definition for ebit, for example, could be required to reconcile their own
ebit calculation into one based on the IASB’s definition.
The IASB in 2017 also plans to finalize a single
accounting model that would be applied to all forms of insurance contracts.
Besides that, the board will work on updating the
system through which filers add disclosures to the electronic versions of
their financial statements. The system is updated on a regular basis and the
IASB produces an annual compilation of all changes each year.
"The IASB and ASBJ Conceptual Frameworks: Same Objective, Different
Financial Performance Concepts," by Carien van Mourik and Yuko Katsuo,
Accounting Horizons, Volume 29, Issue 1 (March 2015) ---
http://aaajournals.org/doi/full/10.2308/acch-50902
This paper illustrates that, despite their general
agreement on the decision-usefulness objective of general purpose financial
reporting, the Accounting Standard Board of Japan (ASBJ) and the
International Accounting Standards Board (IASB)'s conceptual frameworks are
based on two different concepts of financial performance. By identifying and
contrasting the two financial performance concepts and their impact on the
rest of the frameworks and by explaining the thinking that underpins the
ASBJ's chosen financial performance concept, it contributes to a debate
about the role of financial performance concepts in fulfilling the
decision-usefulness objective. Such a debate is pertinent to the revision of
the IASB's Conceptual Framework, which is scheduled for completion in 2015.
. . .
The revision of the International Accounting
Standards Board (IASB)'s Conceptual Framework is scheduled for completion in
2015. This commentary is motivated by the fact that neither the 2010 IASB
Conceptual Framework nor the IASB's 2013 Discussion Paper explains in detail
how the particular concept of financial performance underpinning the IASB
Conceptual Framework leads to financial reporting standards and financial
accounting information that best fulfill the objective of general purpose
financial reporting.
This commentary contrasts the 2010 IASB Conceptual
Framework with the Accounting Standard Board of Japan (ASBJ)'s 2006
Conceptual Framework Discussion Paper (DP). Both conceptual frameworks are
developed from the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) Framework,
but despite their agreement on the decision-usefulness objective of general
purpose financial reporting, the IASB and the ASBJ arrive at different
concepts of financial performance. After identifying and contrasting the
IASB's and the ASBJ's financial performance concepts and their impact on the
rest of the two frameworks, this commentary explains the ASBJ's arguments
for its choice of financial performance concept. The aim is to stimulate and
contribute to an international academic debate about how different concepts
of financial performance are thought to best fulfill the same
decision-usefulness objective.
In this commentary, the term “financial performance
concept” refers to the logic and principles underlying the definition,
recognition, measurement, presentation, and disclosure of the elements of
the statement of financial performance. A system of articulated financial
statements (where the flow statements reconcile with items in the stock
statement at two points in time) requires that the logic and principles be
the same as that underlying the definition, recognition, measurement,
presentation, and disclosure of the elements of the statement of financial
position, the cash flow statement, and the statement of changes in equity.
In contrast, under the non-articulated view, the logic and principles for
the stock statement and the flow statements may be different and therefore
the financial statements cannot directly be reconciled, either within a
period or across time.1 Both the 2010 IASB Framework and the 2006 ASBJ
Framework (which, as will be explained later, is still a discussion paper
[DP]) adhere to the articulated view.2
The 2010 IASB Framework adopts an “all-inclusive
realisable changes in net assets” concept of financial performance. This
means that it recognizes changes in assets and liabilities as income or
expenses when they are realizable (i.e., measurable and reasonably certain
to be realized). On the other hand, the 2006 ASBJ Framework DP adopts a
“released-from-risk net income” concept of financial performance. It
recognizes changes in assets and liabilities as revenues/gains and
expenses/losses in the profit or loss section of the statement of financial
performance when they have either been realized through the receipt or
payment of cash or assets convertible into cash, or released from risk by
virtue of deriving from a financial investment in an asset for which the
exit price equals the entry price.
This commentary consists of four further sections.
First, we present a brief comparative overview of the contexts in which the
2010 IASB Framework and 2006 ASBJ Framework DP were developed, and discuss
their objectives, statuses, and structures. Second, we contrast the
objective of general purpose financial reporting, the qualitative
characteristics, and the financial performance concepts in both frameworks.
Third, we describe how the ASBJ decided on the released-from-risk net income
concept of financial performance and discuss the accounting thought
underpinning this financial performance concept. The fourth and final
section summarizes and concludes.
CONTEXTS, STATUSES, AND STRUCTURES Context and
Status of the 2010 IASB Framework
The International Accounting Standards Committee (IASC)
was established in 1973 by 14 accountancy bodies in seven countries (Camfferman
and Zeff 2007, 48–49). In the early years, the IASC took decisions on a
pragmatic rather than a conceptual basis with the result that its early
standards included numerous, not necessarily theoretically consistent,
options (Camfferman and Zeff 2007, 253). After the FASB completed its
conceptual framework, the IASC established its own conceptual framework in
1989. Framework for the Preparation and Presentation of Financial Statements
“was strongly reminiscent of the FASB's Statements of Financial Accounting
Concepts No. 1, 2, 3, and 5 (1978–1984)” (Camfferman and Zeff 2007, 260).
The 1989 IASC Framework had been established
following a due process that was in essence the same as that set out in the
1973 IASC Constitution (Camfferman and Zeff 2007, 352). In 2001 the IASB
adopted the 1989 Framework without any critical review of its philosophical
and theoretical foundations. In October 2004, the IASB and the FASB decided
to start a joint project to work on a common conceptual framework, which
resulted in Chapters 1 and 3 of the 2010 IASB Framework. The objective of
the project was not to fundamentally review the old 1989 IASC Framework or
the existing FASB Framework, but rather to iron out differences between the
two frameworks. In 2012 the IASB announced that it would recommence its work
on revising Chapter 4 (the remainder of the 1989 IASC Framework) on its own
and in July 2013 issued a DP (IASB 2013). An exposure draft is expected in
early 2015. Context and Status of the 2006 ASBJ Framework DP
Until 2001, the Business Accounting Deliberation
Council (BADC) was the public accounting standard setter in Japan.3 The
Japanese “Accounting Big Bang” started with the establishment of the
Financial Supervisory Agency in 1998, renamed the Financial Services Agency
(FSA) in 2000, with responsibility for ensuring the stability of the
Japanese financial system and the regulation and transparency of the
Japanese financial and securities markets.4 On July 26, 2001 the Financial
Accounting Standards Foundation was established consisting of a board of
directors, trustees, the ASBJ, and an advisory council. Since then, the ASBJ
has been Japan's private sector accounting standard setter.
In January 2003, a Concepts Working Group,
organized by the ASBJ and consisting of nine accounting academics5 and the
seven ASBJ members, started the task of drafting a conceptual framework for
the ASBJ. The Concepts Working Group issued its first full draft of a DP on
June 22, 2004, which was revised in September 2004. By 2005 however, the
IASB and FASB had started their joint convergence project that included
convergence of their conceptual frameworks. Furthermore, in 2005 the IASB
and ASBJ had started meetings on the convergence of financial accounting
standards, and in 2006 the FASB and ASBJ did the same. Around the same time,
Japan was being considered in the equivalence assessment by the EU
(Nishikawa 2011, 4). For these reasons, the ASBJ chose to issue the
Conceptual Framework again as a DP rather than as an exposure draft, which
it did in December 2006 (Saito 2007, 3). The ASBJ believed that the DP would
further evolve through participation in international discussions,
particularly with the IASB and the FASB (ASBJ 2006, Preface). In spite of
its unofficial status, the 2006 ASBJ Framework DP did have an impact on
Japanese accounting standards, for example in the area of accounting for
pensions.6 Structures of the Frameworks
The 2006 ASBJ Conceptual Framework follows the
structure of the 1989 IASC/2001 IASB Conceptual Framework as the ASBJ
thought that this would facilitate communication and mutual understanding (ASBJ
2006, Preface). The 2010 IASB Conceptual Framework has a slightly different
structure, but it also consists of an introduction and four chapters. As
yet, Chapter 2 on the reporting entity has no content, while Chapter 4 is
the remainder of the 1989 IASC/2001 IASB Conceptual Framework. Table 1 shows
the comparative structures of the two frameworks.
Continued in article
"Developing a Conceptual Framework to
Appraise the Corporate Social Responsibility Performance of Islamic Banking and
Finance Institutions," by M. Mansoor Khan, Accounting and the
Public Interest, American Accounting Association, Volume 13, Issue 1
(December 2013) ---
http://aaajournals.org/doi/abs/10.2308/apin-10375
Abstract
This paper fills some of theoretical and empirical deficiencies
regarding Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) dimensions in Islamic
Banking and Financial Institutions (IBFIs). The firms' CSR initiatives are
the key to secure success in modern business and society, and there is a
scope to develop a broader understanding of CSR in globally integrated
business and financial markets. This paper provides the Islamic perspective
of CSR, which is etho-religious based and, thus, more meaningful and
intensified. It proposes a CSR framework for IBFIs based on principles of
Islamic economics and society. The proposed framework urges IBFIs to engage
in community-based banking, work toward the betterment of the poor, ensure
the most efficient and socially desirable utilization of financial
resources, develop their institutional frameworks, infrastructures, and
innovative products to facilitate the wider circulation of wealth and
sustainable development in the world. This paper observes that IBFIs have
failed to deal with underlying CSR challenges due to lack of commitment and
expertise in the field. The CSR-based outlook of IBFIs can only ensure their
legitimacy, sustainability, and long-term success.
Jensen Comment
All accounting standard setters destroyed the concept of net income by giving
priority to balance sheet concepts and fair value accounting where unrealized
changes in transitory fair value are combined with realized net income. As a
result there is no longer a concept of net income since the days of historical
cost accounting standards ala Paton and Littleton ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#Paton
Accounting History Corner
"SPROUSE’S WHAT-YOU-MAY-CALL-ITS: FUNDAMENTAL INSIGHT OR MONUMENTAL MISTAKE?"
by Sudipta Basu and Gegory B. Waymire
Accounting Historians Journal, 2010, Vol. 37, no. 1 ---
http://umiss.lib.olemiss.edu:82/articles/1038402.7233/1.PDF
Hi Glen,
I have some troubles with the link as well. For me, the PDF will run in
my Windows 7 laptop but not my newer Windows 10 laptop, although this
morning the link I gave you is not working on either laptop.
It may be that you have to route to the article as described below.
Try going to
http://www.olemiss.edu/depts/general_library/dac/files/ahj.html
Then scroll down to 2010 Volume 37 Number 1 and click on the line that
says to View Searchable PDF Text File
Then scroll down to the article page numbers may not exactly coincide with
the table of contents depending upon the resolution of your browser.
Abstract
We critically evaluate Sprouse’s 1966 Journal of Accountancyarticle, which
prodded the FASB towards a balance-sheet approach. We highlight three errors
in this article.
First,
Sprouse confuses necessary and sufficient conditions by arguing that
good accounting systems must satisfy the balance-sheet equation.
Second, Sprouse’s insinuation that financial analysts rely on
balance-sheet analysis is contradicted by contemporary and current
security-analysis textbooks, analysts’ written reports, and interviews
with analysts. Third,
and most crucially, Sprouse does not recognize that the primary role
of accounting systems is to help managers discover and exploit profit
able exchange opportunities, without which firms cannot survive
CONCLUDING OBSERVATIONS ON THE LEGACY OF THE
ASSET-LIABILITY APPROACH
Sprouse [1966] is important neither because of its
conceptual insights nor because of its unpersuasive evidence. Rather, the
article matters mainly because it shaped the FASB’s rhetoric and subsequent
standard-setting approach and today’s international standard-setting agenda.
Sprouse’s misinterpretation of Graham and Dodd’s Security Analysis
foreshadows the FASB and IASB misinterpretation of Hicks [1939]. Sprouse and
the two Boards are equally culpable in ignoring actual security-analyst
behavior when advocating their preferences, relying instead on made-up
“users” [Young 2006]. Thus, the current FASB/IASB Conceptual Framework [FASB,
2006] is justifiably seen as a direct descen dant of Sprouse [1966].
Sprouse and the two Boards ignore the implications
(or are unaware) of one of the major stylized facts of U.S. financial
reporting history – the shift from a balance-sheet approach to an
income-statement approach during 1900-1930. The shift to an income-statement
approach is usually attributed to the information needs of a massive influx
of individual investors into U.S. equity markets during this era [e.g.,
Hendriksen, 1970, pp. 51-55]. If individual equity investors are
primarily interested in balance-sheet information, then this shift should
not have occurred when it did. Sprouse and the two Boards never address this
salient historical evidence that contradicts their core as assumption of
investor information needs. More broadly, Sprouse and the two Boards ignore
the historical development of the revenue-expense approach, both in theory
and practice, which we survey in this paper. If financial accounting has
emerged over many generations to maintain consilience with the biologically
evolved human brain [Dickhaut et al., 2010], then an abrupt change to a
fair-value-based, asset-liability approach might well make financial reports
less useful to actual human readers.
Contrary to theoretical ruminations of Sprouse,
security analysts to this day rely primarily on earnings forecasts in
valuing firms. However, today’s analysts can construct their earnings
forecasts only after adjusting for many more non-recurring items that the
FASB has introduced into the income statement. Although SFAS 130 [FASB,
1997] introduced a broader, comprehensive income concept that includes even
more non-recurring items, analysts show no interest in forecasting it or
using it in their analyses. We believe that the FASB’s shift in focus to the
balance sheet has created bigger problems than merely whether financial
analysts have to adjust for new income statement “thingamajigs” instead of
balance sheet “what-you-may-call-its.”
We claim that the lack of analyst interest in the
FASB-mandated, non-recurring items is symptomatic of a monumental mistake in
the asset-liability approach; specifically, it is misaligned with the
reasons that firms exist and the resulting demand for causaldouble-entry
accounting as an economic institution. In other words, while the
asset-liability approach is constructively rational, i.e. deduced from
assumptions that work in a theoretical model, it is unlikely to be
ecologically rational in the sense of improving firms’ survival prospects in
the complex real world [Sargent, 2008; Smith, 2008].
Net earnings and EBITDA cannot be defined since
the FASB and IASB elected to give the balance sheet priority over the income
statement in financial reporting ---
"The Asset-Liability Approach: Primacy does not mean Priority,"
by Robert Bloomfield, FASRI Financial Accounting Standards Research
Initiative, October 6, 2009 ---
http://www.fasri.net/index.php/2009/10/the-asset-liability-approach-primacy-does-not-mean-priority/
This I've got to see
The standard setters' (IASB and FASB) balance sheet priority over the income
statement totally destroyed the concepts of "income" and "earnings."
I'm anxiously awaiting to see the IASB's operational definition of "earnings"
underlying the forthcoming definition of EBIT, etc.
One of my main concerns in this definition is the jumbling of legally earned
revenues with unrealized value changes.
From the CFO Journal's Morning Ledger
on November 3, 2016
IASB evaluating EBIT
The International Accounting Standards Board said
Wednesday it would look at providing new
definitions of common financial terms such as earnings before interest and
taxes, or ebit. The new definitions will be introduced over the next five
years, in order to provide sufficient time for suggestions and comment from
market participants, Nina Trentmann reports.
IASB Plans Overhaul of Financial Definitions
http://blogs.wsj.com/cfo/2016/11/02/iasb-plans-overhaul-of-financial-definitions/?mod=djemCFO_h
The International Accounting Standards Board, or
IASB, which sets reporting standards in more than 120 countries, said
Wednesday it would look at providing new definitions of common financial
terms such as earnings before interest and taxes, or ebit.
The new definitions will be introduced over the
next five years, in order to provide sufficient time for suggestions and
comment from market participants.
The changes will not result in new standards but
will require the board to overhaul existing ones.
At the moment, terms like operating profit are not
defined by the IASB. The aim is to help market participants judge the
suitability of a particular investment.
“We want to give investors the right handles to
look at a balance sheet,” said IASB chairman Hans Hoogervorst.
Up until now, International Financial Reporting
Standards, known as IFRS, leave companies too much flexibility in defining
such terms, which often makes it difficult to compare financials, Mr.
Hoogervorst said.
“Even within sectors, there is a lack of
comparability,” Mr. Hoogervorst said. This affects both investors and
companies, he added.
It is too early to tell what the changes will mean
for companies reporting under IFRS, according to Mr. Hoogervorst. “They
should be less revolutionary than the introduction of new standards but
every change results in work”, he said.
Some firms might find that they have less latitude
when reporting financial results, he said. That could mean more work.
Firms that decide against adopting the new IASB
definition for ebit, for example, could be required to reconcile their own
ebit calculation into one based on the IASB’s definition.
The IASB in 2017 also plans to finalize a single
accounting model that would be applied to all forms of insurance contracts.
Besides that, the board will work on updating the
system through which filers add disclosures to the electronic versions of
their financial statements. The system is updated on a regular basis and the
IASB produces an annual compilation of all changes each year.
"Whither the Concept of Income?" by Shizuki Saito University of Tokyo
and Yoshitaka Fukui Aoyama Gakuin University, SSRN, May 17, 2015 ---
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2607234
Abstract:
Since the 1970s, the decision-usefulness has taken center stage and our
attention has been concentrated on valuation of assets and liabilities
instead of income measurement. The concept of income, once considered the
gravitational center of accounting has lost its primacy and become a
byproduct of the balance sheet derived from the measurement of assets and
liabilities.
However, we have not been equipped with robust
conceptual foundation supporting theoretically reasoned accounting
measurement. It is not only theoretically but also practically important to
renew our seemingly waned interest in the concept of income because ongoing
reforms of accounting standards cannot be successfully implemented without a
sound understanding of the concept of income.
Be that as it may, net earnings and EBITDA are all-important because
investors change their portfolios based on net earnings and its derivatives more
than anything in the balance sheet.
"Accounting Alchemy," by Robert E. Verrecchia, Accounting Horizons,
September 2013, pp. 603-618.
Verrecchia alleges that it's not that managers have a functional fixation for
earnings metrics as it is that they believe that other managers and investors
are so fixated with earnings that it because of monumental importance not
because it is inherently a great metric but because they believe deeply that the
market itself makes this index of vital importance.
. . .
In summary, my thesis is that managers project that
others are fixated on earnings—independent of any evidence in support
of, or contrary to, this phenomenon. This leads to managers resisting the
inclusion in earnings items that fail to enhance performance, such as the
amortization of Goodwill, or measures that make future performance more
volatile, such as those based on fair value. In the absence of acknowledging
PEF and attempting to grapple with it, I continue to see confrontations over
accounting regulation along the lines of recent debates about fair value
accounting, in addition to further impediments along the path to greater
transparency in financial statements.
It's a bit like requiring calculus for undergraduate accounting courses.
Calculus probably is not essential in any undergraduate accounting course in the
curriculum, but faculty are fixated that the best accounting majors are the ones
do well in calculus. Similarly, investors change their portfolios based on
earnings, eps, EBITDA, and P/E ratios when in fact those metrics are not defined
and may have a lot of misleading noise and secret manipulation
Bob Jensen's threads on the differences between IASB versus FASB standards
---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#MethodsForSetting
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting theory ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm
Future of the Accounting Profession
Discover Accounting ---
https://discoveraccounting.org/resources/
'Leaders of the accounting profession discuss its biggest nightmares,"
Accounting Today, September 28, 2015 ---
http://www.accountingtoday.com/news/firm-profession/losing-sleep-75927-1.html
That’s the question facing the accounting
profession, as it advances through a period of unprecedented change: Which
of the many issues that cry out for attention should the profession address
first?
The short answer is: All of them.
In trying to solve this riddle, we reached out to
the leaders in accounting — the regulators, association chiefs, thought
leaders, trailblazing firm owners, software developers, consultants and so
on — and asked them what they thought were the most important issues facing
the field. Their answers covered the wide range that you would expect, but
as we dug through them, three broad categories of concern emerged, each of
which subsumed a number of individual issues. What’s more, all three broad
categories were related in ways that both multiplied their difficulty, and
also pointed toward possible solutions.
Call them the Three Nightmares of the Accounting
Profession, and read on to see what the field’s leaders think can be done to
wake up from them.
THE NIGHTMARE OF IRRELEVANCE
The most-cited concern was the worry that the
profession is dropping behind not just its clients, but the world as a
whole, seeing its core services rendered obsolete by technology, their value
to clients plummeting.
Technology thought leader and educator Doug Sleeter
described it very simply: “The profession is struggling to maintain its
relevance in the eyes of clients. As a whole, the focus is still too much on
compliance services and not enough on going deeper with client engagements.”
ACCA AND IMA EXPLORE FUTURE CHALLENGES FACING THE ACCOUNTING
PROFESSION ---
by Bob Schneider
AccountingEducation.com, September 18, 2015
http://www.accountingeducation.com/index.cfm?page=newsdetails&id=153571
September 4, 2015 Message from Gerald Trites in Canada
Hi Bob,
Is there any material in our website
on the Future of the Profession? In particular I am researching possible
initiatives that could be taken that are new and not presently being
done that will be needed to adapt to our changing world. I have found
numerous articles on the future of the profession but there is not much
real innovation out there.
Jerry
Jensen Comment
There are predictions all over the place, many of which vary with parts of
what we call accountancy. For example, technology will increasingly replace
bookkeepers in capturing transactions, journalizing, posting, closing the
books, and preparing financial statements --- all without human beings.
Technology will also increasingly replace human auditors, although this
happening is further down the road.
But the "future of accounting" can be viewed even without
focusing on human accountants. Even if robots determine what data is
captured and eventually put on financial statements those robots will have
to be guided by accounting policies, standards, and operational rules. Here
futurists are widely divided by traditional and historic differences such as
preferences for historical cost (price-level adjusted), entry values, exit
values, economic values, etc. Robots are no better than humans in measuring
and disclosing intangibles than human accountants. What we really would like
is a robot that can measure "value in use," but that robot if it exists at
all still resides in other galaxies.
In terms of financial accounting standards most of us
thought that it would soon be a done deal to give the IASB a monopoly on
setting the standards and principles that guide operational decisions. But
it looks like, gratefully in my opinion, that the IASB is going to have to
wait decades for monopoly powers.
The future of accounting is conditioned upon the future of
world economics. Most advances in accounting have assumed some form of
capitalism with heavy financial and managerial accounting advances for
business enterprises. The state of accountancy for socialism and
governmental accounting in general is still in the dark ages. We only have
to compare Soviet accounting advances in the 20th Century with accounting
advances in the West to appreciate that as imperfect as accounting is in the
West it is well ahead of Soviet accounting that amounted to writing of
fiction.
You might take a look at the following article in
Forbes.
The Future Of The Accounting Industry In 2015 ---
http://www.forbes.com/sites/russalanprince/2015/01/21/the-future-of-the-accounting-industry-in-2015/
I would download this immediately before Forbes takes it off the Web
Software was a frequently cited villain in the
case. “Technology is moving so fast that all the bean-counting that has been
the heart and soul of the industry is disappearing fast,” warned 2020 Group
chairman Chris Frederiksen, describing how staples of accounting like
recording purchases, writing checks, invoicing and others have disappeared
in the face of automation. “Some firms have moved swiftly to give clients
what they want: accurate, timely information and meaningful advice.”
Continued in article
PwC: Re-Branding the Accounting Profession ---
http://www.pwc.ch/en/video.html?objects.mid=362&navigationid=3856
Accounting in the 21st Century: :
Re-Branding the CPA
Profession
PwC: Re-Branding the Accounting Profession ---
http://www.pwc.ch/en/video.html?objects.mid=362&navigationid=3856
September 20,
2010 message from Bob Jensen
Hi Denny,
Yes, I could
access the PwC re-branding video directly without having to log in:
http://www.pwc.ch/en/video.html?objects.mid=362&navigationid=3856
I do have a
PwC Direct password, but I really doubt that the Switzerland link is using a
cookie.
In any case
the home page of PwC does not require any login ---
http://www.pwc.com/
The video is now on this home page.
This takes
me back to the days when Bob Eliott, eventually as President of the AICPA,
was proposing great changes in the profession, including SysTrust, WebTrust,
Eldercare Assurance, etc. For years I used Bob’s AICPA/KPMG videos as
starting points for discussion in my accounting theory course. Bob relied
heavily on the analogy of why the railroads that did not adapt to
innovations in transportation such as Interstate Highways and Jet Airliners
went downhill and not uphill. The railroads simply gave up new opportunities
to startup professions rather than adapt from railroading to transportation.
Bob’s
underlying assumption was that CPA firms could extend assurance services to
non-traditional areas (where they were not experts but could hire new kinds
of experts) by leveraging the public image of accountants as having high
integrity and professional responsibility. That public image was destroyed
by the many auditing scandals, notably Enron and the implosion of Andersen,
that surfaced in the late 1990s and beyond ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm
This is a 1998 lecture given by
Bob Eliott before his world (the lofty public perception of CPA firm
integrity) collapsed ---
http://newman.baruch.cuny.edu/digital/saxe/saxe_1998/elliott_98.ht
The AICPA
commenced initiatives on such things as Systrust. To my knowledge most of
these initiatives bit the dust, although some CPA firms might be making
money by assuring Eldercare services.
The counter
argument to Bob Elliot’s initiatives is that CPA firms had no comparative
advantages in expertise in their new ventures just as railroads had few
comparative advantages in trucking and airline transportation industries,
although the concept of piggy backing of truck trailers eventually caught
on.
I still have
copies of Bob’s great VCR tapes, but I doubt that these have ever been
digitized. Bob could sell refrigerators to Eskimos.
September 21, 2010 reply from Roger Debreceny
[roger@DEBRECENY.COM]
Isn't interesting that the pwc video has nothing at
all to say about protection of the investor or maintenance of the public
interest. It is all about value for the client. The client gets mentioned at
least a dozen times -- investors and the public, zero times.
If these are truly the internalized values of the
firm, we're sure to have more audit failures in coming years.
<sigh>
Roger
September 22, 2010 reply from Bob Jensen
Hi Roger,
In 1998, Bob
Elliott argued that financial audits were destined in the 21st
Century to be money losing assurance services ---
http://www.baruch.cuny.edu/library/alumni/online_exhibits/digital/saxe/saxe_1998/elliott_98.htm
This is a great lecture that can be debated in various accounting courses,
notably AIS, Ethics, and Auditing courses.
Sarbox (Sarbanes,
SOX) revived the profitability of financial audits but possibly not for long
as worldwide lawsuits commence to take their toll on the auditing firms.
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm
A key point made
by Bob Elliott is that expansion of assurance services (e.g., SysTrust and
Eldercare) is levered on the public image of CPA firms’ high integrity and
professional responsibility. After this shining public image of CPA firms’
integrity and professional responsibility was tarnished since the turn of
the Century, the question becomes what comparative advantages do CPA firms
have that gives them comparative advantage. If you believe Francine, there’s
not much left for the largest auditing firms aside from an existing global
network of offices, infrastructures, vast teams of lawyers, and whatever is
left of a once-shining public image
Bob Jensen
September 22, 2010 reply from Francine McKenna re: The Auditors Blog
[retheauditors@GMAIL.COM]
Bob, it's all about branding. If you look at what
Deloitte now says on their new boilerplate legal language- they recently
converted from Swiss Verein to UK private firm structure - you'll see that
brand is king. "Deloitte is a brand..." It begins.
Deloitte has a consulting firm they never shed, PwC
wants one bad and is counting on it to grow to pull the rest if the firm up.
KPMG is trying to get back in. They were advertising their presence at
Oracle Open World user conf. EY seems the only one laying low, but then
again I predicted that. Time and money is being spent on lots of litigation
and they have the whopper of the day-Lehman. Yes, we are back pre-2000 and
no one is doing anything to stop it. In the UK the regulators and media are
rattling sabers but in the US nada but me and a few others like Jim
Peterson. The PCAOB has no powers to stop acquisitions like BearingPoint and
Diamond by PwC that distract them and waste resources that should be spent
on training and quality assurance.
Francine
Bob Jensen's threads on auditor independence and professional
responsibility ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm#Professionalism
Bob Jensen's threads on auditor independence
and professional responsibility ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm#Professionalism
History of
Accountics
Accountics
is the mathematical science of values.
Charles Sprague [1887] as quoted by McMillan [1998, p. 1][NH1]
Hi Pat,
Interestingly, the term
“accountics” was coined by a Civil War veteran (badly wounded) who practiced
accounting in the 19th Century in New York City. He also taught
accounting at both Columbia College (now Columbia University) and New York
University.
In a 2007 Accounting Historians Journal
article, I simply revived the term after nearly 80 years of dormancy ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/395wpTAR/Web/TAR395wp.htm
But accounting history buffs should note that the term
“accountics” was a big deal between 1887 and 1925. In particular, heated debates
arose regarding whether The Accounting Review should commence in 1925 as
an accountics journal for mathematical economists or as a journal for accounting
teachers and practitioners.
You can read the following
at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/395wpTAR/Web/TAR395wp.htm
TAR BETWEEN 1926
AND 1955: IGNORING ACCOUNTICS
Accounting professor Charles
Sprague of Columbia University (then called Columbia College) coined the word
"accountics" in 1887. The word is not used today in accounting and has some
alternative meanings outside our discipline. However, in the early 20th
century, accountics was the centerpiece of some unpublished lectures by Sprague.
McMillan [1998, p. 11] stated the following:
These claims were
not a pragmatic strategy to legitimize the development of sophisticated
bookkeeping theories. Rather, this development of a science was seen as
revealing long-hidden realities within the economic environment and the
double-entry bookkeeping system itself. The science of accounts, through
systematic mathematical analysis, could discover hidden thrust of the reality of
economic value. The term “accountics” captured the imagination of the members of
the IA, connoting advances in bookkeeping that all these men were experiencing.
By 1900, there was a journal called Accountics
[Forrester, 2003]. Both the journal and the term “accountics” had short lives,
but the belief that mathematical analysis and empirical research can “discover
hidden thrust of the reality of economic value” (see above) underlies much of
what has been published in TAR over the past three decades. Hence, we propose
reviving the term “accountics” to describe the research methods and quantitative
analysis tools that have become popular in TAR and other leading accounting
research journals. We essentially define accountics as equivalent to the
scientific study of values in what Zimmerman [2001, p. 414] called “agency
problems, corporate governance, capital asset pricing, capital budgeting,
decision analysis, risk management, queuing theory, and statistical audit
analysis.”
The American Association of
University Instructors of Accounting, which in December 1935 became the American
Accounting Association, commenced unofficially in 1915 [Zeff, 1966, p. 5]. It
was proposed in October of 1919 that the Association publish a Quarterly
Journal of Accountics. This
proposed accountics journal never got off the ground as leaders in the
Association argued heatedly and fruitlessly about whether accountancy was a
science. A quarterly journal called The Accounting Review was
subsequently born in 1925, with its first issue being published in March of
1926. Its accountics-like attributes did not commence in earnest until the
1960s.
Practitioner involvement, in a large measure, was the reason for changing the
name of the Association by removing the words “of University Instructors.”
Practitioners interested in accounting education participated actively in AAA
meetings. TAR articles in the first several decades were devoted heavily to
education issues and accounting issues in particular industries and trade
groups. Research methodologies were mainly normative (without mathematics), case
study, and archival (history) methods. Anecdotal evidence and hypothetical
illustrations ruled the day. The longest serving editor of TAR was a
practitioner named Eric
Kohler,
who determined what was published in TAR between 1929 and 1943. In those years,
when the AAA leadership mandated that TAR focus on the development of accounting
principles, publications were oriented to both practitioners and educators,
Chatfield [1975, p. 4].
Following World War II, practitioners outnumbered educators in the AAA
[Chatfield 1975, p. 4]. Leading partners from accounting firms took pride in
publishing papers and books intended to inspire scholarship among professors and
students. Over the years, some practitioners, particularly those with scholarly
publications, were admitted into the Accounting Hall of Fame founded by The Ohio
State University. Prior to the 1960s, accounting educators were generally long
on practical experience and short on academic credentials such as doctoral
degrees.
A major catalyst for change in
accounting research occurred when the Ford Foundation poured millions of dollars
into the study of collegiate business schools and the funding of doctoral
programs and students in business studies. Gordon and Howell [1959] reported
that business faculty in colleges lacked research skills and academic esteem
when compared to their colleagues in the sciences. The Ford Foundation
thereafter provided funding for doctoral programs and for top quality graduate
students to pursue doctoral degrees in business and accountancy. The Foundation
even funded publication of selected doctoral dissertations to give doctoral
studies in business more visibility. Great pressures were also brought to bear
on academic associations like the AAA to increase the scientific standards for
publications in journals like TAR.
TAR BETWEEN 1956
AND 1985: NURTURING OF ACCOUNTICS
A perfect storm for change in
accounting research arose in the late 1950s and early1960s. First came the
critical Pierson Carnegie Report [1959] and the Gordon and Howell Ford
Foundation Report [1959]. Shortly thereafter, the AACSB introduced a requirement
requiring that a certain percentage of faculty possess doctoral degrees for
business education programs seeking accreditation [Bricker
and Previts, 1990]. Soon
afterwards, both a doctorate and publication in top accounting research journals
became necessary for tenure [Langenderfer, 1987].
A second component of this
perfect storm for change was the proliferation of mainframe computers, the
development of analytical software (e.g., early SPSS for mainframes), and the
dawning of management and decision “sciences.” The third huge stimulus for
changed research is rooted in portfolio theory discovered by Harry Markowitz
in1952 that became the core of his dissertation at Princeton University, which
was published in book form in 1959. This theory eventually gave birth to the
Nobel Prize winning Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM) and a new era of capital
market research. A fourth stimulus was when the CRSP stock price tapes became
available from the University of Chicago. The availability of CRSP led to a high
number of TAR articles on capital market event studies (e.g., earnings
announcements on trading prices and volumes) covering a period of nearly 40
years.
This “perfect storm” roared into
nearly all accounting and finance research and turned academic accounting
research into an accountics-centered science of values and
mathematical/statistical analysis. After 1960, there was a shift in TAR, albeit
slow at first, toward preferences for quantitative model building ---
econometric models in capital market studies, time series models in forecasting,
advanced calculus information science, information economics, analytical models,
and psychometric behavioral models. Chatfield [1975, p. 6] wrote the following:
Beginning in the
1960s the Review published many more articles by non-accountants, whose
contribution involved showing how ideas or methods from their own discipline
could be used to solve particular accounting problems. The more successful
adaptations included matrix theory, mathematical model building, organization
theory, linear programming, and Bayesian analysis.
TAR was not alone in moving
toward a more quantitative focus. Accountics methodologies accompanied similar
quantitative model building preferences in finance, marketing, management
science, decision science, operations research, information economics, computer
science, and information systems. Early changes along these lines began to
appear in other leading research journals between 1956-1965, with some
mathematical modeling papers noted by Dyckman and Zeff [1984, p. 229]. Fleming,
Graci and Thompson [2000, p. 43] documented additional emphasis on quantitative
methodology between 1966 and 1985. In particular, they note how tenure
requirements began to change and asserted the following:
The Accounting
Review evolved into a
journal with demanding acceptance standards whose leading authors were highly
educated accounting academics who, to a large degree, brought methods and tools
from other disciplines to bear upon accounting issues.
A number of new academic
accountancy journals were launched in the early 1960s, including the Journal
of Accounting Research (1963), Abacus (1965) and The International
Journal of Accounting Education and Research (1965). Clinging to its
traditional normative roots and trade-article style would have made TAR appear
to be a journal for academic luddites. Actually, many of the new mathematical
approaches to theory development were fundamentally normative, but they were
couched in the formidable language and rigors of mathematics. Publication of
papers in traditional normative theory, history, and systems slowly ground to
almost zero in the new age of accountics.
These new spearheads in
accountics were not without problems. It is both humorous and sad to go back and
discover how naïve and misleading some of TAR’s bold and high risk thrusts were
in quantitative methods. Statistical models were employed without regard to
underlying assumptions of independence, temporal stationarity, multicollinearity,
homoscedasticity, missing variables, and departures from the normal
distribution. Mathematical applications were proposed for real-world systems
that failed to meet continuity and non-convexity assumptions inherent in models
such as linear programming and calculus optimizations. Some proposed
applications of finite mathematics and discrete (integer) programming failed
because the fastest computers in the world, then and now, could not solve most
realistic integer programming problems in less than 100 years.
After financial databases
provided a beta covariance of each security in a portfolio with the market
portfolio, many capital market events studies were published by TAR and other
leading accounting journals. In the early years, accounting researchers did not
challenge the CAPM’s assumptions and limitations --- limitations that, in
retrospect, cast doubt upon many of the findings based upon any single index of
market risk [Fama and French, 1992].
Leading accounting professors
lamented TAR’s preference for rigor over relevancy [Zeff, 1978; Lee, 1997; and
Williams, 1985 and 2003]. Sundem [1987] provides revealing information about the
changed perceptions of authors, almost entirely from academe, who submitted
manuscripts for review between June 1982 and May 1986. Among the 1,148
submissions, only 39 used archival (history) methods; 34 of those submissions
were rejected. Another 34 submissions used survey methods; 33 of those were
rejected. And 100 submissions used traditional normative (deductive) methods
with 85 of those being rejected. Except for a small set of 28 manuscripts
classified as using “other” methods (mainly descriptive empirical according to
Sundem), the remaining larger subset of submitted manuscripts used methods that
Sundem [1987, p. 199] classified these as follows:
292 General Empirical
172 Behavioral
135 Analytical modeling
119 Capital Market
97 Economic modeling
40 Statistical modeling
29 Simulation
It is clear that by 1982, accounting researchers realized that
having mathematical or statistical analysis in TAR submissions made accountics
virtually a necessary, albeit not sufficient, condition for acceptance for
publication. It became increasingly difficult for a single editor to have
expertise in all of the above methods. In the late 1960s, editorial decisions on
publication shifted from the TAR editor alone to the TAR editor in conjunction
with specialized referees and eventually associate editors [Flesher, 1991, p.
167]. Fleming et al. [2000, p. 45] wrote the following:
The big change
was in research methods. Modeling and empirical methods became prominent during
1966-1985, with analytical modeling and general empirical methods leading the
way. Although used to a surprising extent, deductive-type methods declined in
popularity, especially in the second half of the 1966-1985 period.
We were surprised that there was
no reduction in accountics dominance in TAR since 1986 in spite of changes in
the environment such as the explosion of communications networking, interacting
relational databases, and sophisticated accounting information systems (AIS).Virtually
no AIS papers were published in TAR between 1986 and 2005. This practice was
changed in 2006 by the appointment of a new AIS associate editor to encourage
publication of some AIS papers that often do not fit neatly into the accountics
mold. In an interesting aside, we note that the AAA has become a leading
international association of accounting educators. Sundem [1987] reported
that about 12 percent of the manuscripts submitted came from outside of North
America. The American Accounting Association is an international association
that provides publication opportunities to all members, and manuscripts are
submitted from many parts of the world. In our opinion, this contributed
significantly to the rise in accountics studies worldwide.
A major change at TAR took place
in the 1980s with the creation of new AAA journals to relieve TAR of publishing
articles that were less accountics-oriented. Prior to 1983, TAR was the leading
academic journal for teachers of accounting as well as practitioners. Numerous
TAR papers appeared on how to improve accounting education and teaching. In an
effort to better serve educators, the AAA created a specialty journal called
Issues in Accounting Education, first published in 1983. A journal aimed
more at issues facing practitioners was inaugurated in 1987 under the name
Accounting Horizons. Around this time, the AAA also granted permission for
specialty “sections” to be formed for sub-disciplines of accounting, which
resulted in additional new journals. These new journals allowed TAR to focus
more heavily on quantitative papers that became increasingly difficult for
practitioners and many teachers of accounting to comprehend.
Fleming et al. [2000, p. 48]
report that education articles in TAR declined from 21 percent in 1946-1965 to 8
percent in 1966-1985. Issues in Accounting Education began to publish the
education articles in 1983. Garcha, Harwood, and Hermanson [1983] reported on
the readership of TAR before any new specialty journals commenced in the AAA.
They found that among their AAA membership respondents, only 41.7 percent would
subscribe to TAR if it became unbundled in terms of dollar savings from AAA
membership dues. This suggests that TAR was not meeting the AAA membership’s
needs. Based heavily upon the written comments of respondents, the authors’
conclusions were, in part, as follows by Garcha, Harwood, and Hermanson [1983,
p. 37]:
The findings of the survey reveal that opinions vary regarding
TAR and that emotions run high. At one extreme some respondents seem to believe
that TAR is performing its intended function very well. Those sharing this view
may believe that its mission is to provide a high-quality outlet for those at
the cutting-edge of accounting research. The pay-off for this approach may be
recognition by peers, achieving tenure and promotion, and gaining mobility
should one care to move. This group may also believe that trying to affect
current practice is futile anyway, so why even try?
At the other extreme are those who believe that TAR is not
serving its intended purpose. This group may believe TAR should serve the
readership interests of the audiences identified by the Moonitz Committee. Many
in the intended audience cannot write for, cannot read, or are not interested in
reading the Main Articles which have been published during approximately the
last decade. As a result there is the suggestion that this group believes that a
change in editorial policy is needed.
After a study by
Abdel-khalik [1976]
revealed complaints about the difficulties of following the increased
quantitative terminology in TAR, editors did introduce abstracts at the
beginning of the articles to summarize major findings with less jargon [Flesher,
1991, p. 169]. However,
the problem was simultaneously exacerbated when TAR stopped publishing
commentaries and rebuttals that sometimes aided comprehension of complicated
research. Science journals often are much better about encouraging commentaries,
replications, and rebuttals.
TAR BETWEEN 1986
AND 2005: MATURATION OF ACCOUNTICS
We pointed out earlier in Table
2 how the numbers of authors having five or more appearances in twenty-year time
spans has markedly declined over the entire 80-year life of TAR. Table 4 lists
the most recent top authors for the 1986-2005 period. In contrast to Heck and
Bremser [1986] findings, the likelihood that any single author will have more
than five appearances is greatly reduced in more recent times.
Continued at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/395wpTAR/Web/TAR395wp.htm
Research at the University of Rochester ---
https://urresearch.rochester.edu/home.action
Jensen Comment
Note that this site includes a long listing of research in accounting, finance,
and economics, much of it based on positivism and financial markets.
Michael Jensen ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Jensen
Maximizing Shareholder Value ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shareholder_value#Maximizing_shareholder_value
"Why the “Maximizing Shareholder Value” Theory of Corporate Governance is
Bogus," Naked Capitalism, October 21, 2013 ---
http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2013/10/why-the-maximizing-shareholder-value-theory-of-corporate-governance-is-bogus.html
. . .
So how did this “the last shall come first” thinking become established?
You can blame it all on economists, specifically Harvard Business
School’s Michael Jensen. In other words, this idea did not come out of
legal analysis, changes in regulation, or court decisions. It was simply
an academic theory that went mainstream. And to add insult to injury,
the version of the Jensen formula that became popular was its worst
possible embodiment.
A terrific 2010 paper by Frank Dobbin and Jiwook
Jung, “The
Misapplication of Mr. Michael Jensen: How Agency Theory Brought Down the
Economy and Might Do It Again,” explains how this line of thinking
went mainstream. I strongly suggest you read it in full, but I’ll give a
brief recap for the time-pressed.
In the 1970s, there was a great deal of hand-wringing in America as
Japanese and German manufacturers were eating American’s lunch. That led
to renewed examination of how US companies were managed, with lots of
theorizing about what went wrong and what the remedies might be. In
1976, Jensen and William Meckling asserted that the problem was that
corporate executives served their own interests rather than those of
shareholders, in other words, that there was an agency problem.
Executives wanted to build empires while shareholders wanted profits to
be maximized.
I strongly suspect that if Jensen and Meckling had not come out with
this line of thinking, you would have gotten something similar to
justify the actions of the leveraged buyout kings, who were just getting
started in the 1970s and were reshaping the corporate landscape by the
mid-1980s. They were doing many of the things Jensen and Meckling
recommended: breaking up multi-business companies, thinning out
corporate centers, and selling corporate assets (some of which were
clearly excess, like corporate art and jet collection, while other sales
were simply to increase leverage, like selling corporate office
buildings and leasing them back). In other words, a likely reason that
Jensen and Meckling’s theory gained traction was it appeared to validate
a fundamental challenge to incumbent managements. (Dobbin and Jung
attribute this trend, as pretty much everyone does, to Jensen because he
continued to develop it. What really put it on the map was a 1990
Harvard Business Review article, “It’s
Not What You Pay CEOs, but How,” that led to an explosion in the use
of option-based pay and resulted in a huge increase in CEO pay relative
to that of average workers.)
To forestall takeovers, many companies implemented the measures an
LBO artist might take before his invading army arrived: sell off
non-core divisions, borrow more, shed staff.
The problem was to the extent that the Jensen/Meckling prescription
had merit, only the parts that helped company executives were adopted.
Jensen didn’t just call on executives to become less ministerial and
more entrepreneurial; they also called for more independent and engaged
boards to oversee and discipline top managers, and more equity-driven
pay, both options and other equity-linked compensation, to make
management more sensitive to both upside and downside risks.
Over the next two decades, companies levered up, became more
short-term oriented, and executive pay levels exploded. As Dobbin and
Jung put it, “The result of the changes promoted by agency theory was
that by the late 1990s, corporate America’s leaders were drag racing
without the brakes.”
The paper proceeds to analyze in considerable detail how three of the
major prescriptions of “agency theory” aka “executives and boards should
maximize value,” namely, pay for (mythical) performance,
dediversification, and greater reliance on debt all increased risk. And
the authors also detail how efforts to improve oversight were
ineffective.
But the paper also makes clear that this vision of how companies
should be run was simply a new management fashion, as opposed to any
sort of legal requirement:
Organizational institutionalists have long argued that new
management practices diffuse through networks of firms like fads
spread through high schools….In their models, new paradigms are
socially constructed as appropriate solutions to perceived problems
or crises….Expert groups that stand to gain from having their
preferred strategies adopted by firms then enter the void, competing
to have their model adopted….
And as Dobbin and Jung point out, the parts of the Jensen formula
that got adopted were the one that had constituents. The ones that
promoted looting and short-termism had obvious followings. The ones for
prudent management didn’t.
And consider the implications of Jensen’s prescriptions, of pushing
companies to favor shareholders, when they actually stand at the back of
the line from a legal perspective. The result is that various agents
(board compensation consultants, management consultants, and cronyistic
boards themselves) have put incentives in place for CEOs to favor
shareholders over parties that otherwise should get better treatment. So
is it any surprise that companies treat employees like toilet paper,
squeeze vendors, lobby hard for tax breaks and to weaken regulations,
and worse, like fudge their financial reports? Jensen himself, in 2005,
repudiated his earlier prescription precisely because it led to fraud.
From
an interview with the New York Times:
Q. So the maximum stock price is the holy grail?
A. Absolutely not. Warren Buffett says he worries as much when
one of his companies becomes overvalued as undervalued. I agree.
Overvalued equity is managerial heroin – it feels really great when
you start out; you’re feted on television; investment bankers vie to
float new issues.
But it doesn’t take long before the elation and ecstasy turn into
enormous pain. The market starts demanding increased earnings and
revenues, and the managers begin to say: “Holy Moley! How are we
going to generate the returns?” They look for legal loopholes in the
accounting, and when those don’t work, even basically honest people
move around the corner to outright fraud.
If they hold a lot of stock or options themselves, it is like
pouring gasoline on a fire. They fudge the numbers and hope they can
sell the stock or exercise the options before anything hits the fan.
Q. Are you suggesting that executives be rewarded for driving
down the price of the stock?
A. I’m saying they should be rewarded for being honest. A C.E.O.
should be able to tell investors, “Listen, this company isn’t worth
its $70 billion market cap; it’s really worth $30 billion, and
here’s why.”
But the board would fire that executive immediately. I guess it
has to be preventative – if executives would present the market with
realistic numbers rather than overoptimistic expectations, the stock
price would stay realistic. But I admit, we scholars don’t yet know
the real answer to how to make this happen.
So having led Corporate America in the wrong direction, Jensen
‘fesses up no one knows the way out. But if executives weren’t
incentivized to take such a topsy-turvey shareholder-driven view of the
world, they’d weigh their obligations to other constituencies, including
the community at large, along with earning shareholders a decent return.
But it’s now become so institutionalized it’s hard to see how to move to
a more sensible regime. For instance, analysts regularly try pressuring
Costco to pay its workers less, wanting fatter margins. But the
comparatively high wages are
an integral part of Costco’s formula: it reduces costly staff
turnover and employee pilferage. And Costco’s upscale members report
they prefer to patronize a store they know treats workers better than
Walmart and other discounters. If managers with an established,
successful formulas still encounter pressure from the Street to strip
mine their companies, imagine how hard it is for struggling companies or
less secure top executives to implement strategies that will take a
while to reap rewards. I’ve been getting reports from McKinsey from the
better part of a decade that they simply can’t get their clients to
implement new initiatives if they’ll dent quarterly returns.
This governance system is actually in crisis, but the extraordinary
profit share that companies have managed to achieve by squeezing workers
and the asset-goosing success of post-crisis financial policies have
produced an illusion of health. But porcine maquillage only improves
appearances; it doesn’t mask the stench of gangrene. Nevertheless,
executives have successfully hidden the generally unhealthy state of
their companies. As long as they have cheerleading analysts, complacent
boards and the Fed protecting their back, they can likely continue to
inflict more damage, using “maximizing shareholder value” canard as the
cover for continuing rent extraction.
Read more at
http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2013/10/why-the-maximizing-shareholder-value-theory-of-corporate-governance-is-bogus.html#ehj10weqAL2vdXkh.99
So how did this “the last shall come first” thinking become established?
You can blame it all on economists, specifically Harvard Business
School’s Michael Jensen. In other words, this idea did not come out of
legal analysis, changes in regulation, or court decisions. It was simply
an academic theory that went mainstream. And to add insult to injury,
the version of the Jensen formula that became popular was its worst
possible embodiment.
A terrific 2010 paper by Frank Dobbin and Jiwook
Jung, “The
Misapplication of Mr. Michael Jensen: How Agency Theory Brought Down the
Economy and Might Do It Again,” explains how this line of thinking
went mainstream. I strongly suggest you read it in full, but I’ll give a
brief recap for the time-pressed.
In the 1970s, there was a great deal of hand-wringing in America as
Japanese and German manufacturers were eating American’s lunch. That led
to renewed examination of how US companies were managed, with lots of
theorizing about what went wrong and what the remedies might be. In
1976, Jensen and William Meckling asserted that the problem was that
corporate executives served their own interests rather than those of
shareholders, in other words, that there was an agency problem.
Executives wanted to build empires while shareholders wanted profits to
be maximized.
I strongly suspect that if Jensen and Meckling had not come out with
this line of thinking, you would have gotten something similar to
justify the actions of the leveraged buyout kings, who were just getting
started in the 1970s and were reshaping the corporate landscape by the
mid-1980s. They were doing many of the things Jensen and Meckling
recommended: breaking up multi-business companies, thinning out
corporate centers, and selling corporate assets (some of which were
clearly excess, like corporate art and jet collection, while other sales
were simply to increase leverage, like selling corporate office
buildings and leasing them back). In other words, a likely reason that
Jensen and Meckling’s theory gained traction was it appeared to validate
a fundamental challenge to incumbent managements. (Dobbin and Jung
attribute this trend, as pretty much everyone does, to Jensen because he
continued to develop it. What really put it on the map was a 1990
Harvard Business Review article, “It’s
Not What You Pay CEOs, but How,” that led to an explosion in the use
of option-based pay and resulted in a huge increase in CEO pay relative
to that of average workers.)
To forestall takeovers, many companies implemented the measures an
LBO artist might take before his invading army arrived: sell off
non-core divisions, borrow more, shed staff.
The problem was to the extent that the Jensen/Meckling prescription
had merit, only the parts that helped company executives were adopted.
Jensen didn’t just call on executives to become less ministerial and
more entrepreneurial; they also called for more independent and engaged
boards to oversee and discipline top managers, and more equity-driven
pay, both options and other equity-linked compensation, to make
management more sensitive to both upside and downside risks.
Over the next two decades, companies levered up, became more
short-term oriented, and executive pay levels exploded. As Dobbin and
Jung put it, “The result of the changes promoted by agency theory was
that by the late 1990s, corporate America’s leaders were drag racing
without the brakes.”
The paper proceeds to analyze in considerable detail how three of the
major prescriptions of “agency theory” aka “executives and boards should
maximize value,” namely, pay for (mythical) performance,
dediversification, and greater reliance on debt all increased risk. And
the authors also detail how efforts to improve oversight were
ineffective.
But the paper also makes clear that this vision of how companies
should be run was simply a new management fashion, as opposed to any
sort of legal requirement:
Organizational institutionalists have long argued that new
management practices diffuse through networks of firms like fads
spread through high schools….In their models, new paradigms are
socially constructed as appropriate solutions to perceived problems
or crises….Expert groups that stand to gain from having their
preferred strategies adopted by firms then enter the void, competing
to have their model adopted….
And as Dobbin and Jung point out, the parts of the Jensen formula
that got adopted were the one that had constituents. The ones that
promoted looting and short-termism had obvious followings. The ones for
prudent management didn’t.
And consider the implications of Jensen’s prescriptions, of pushing
companies to favor shareholders, when they actually stand at the back of
the line from a legal perspective. The result is that various agents
(board compensation consultants, management consultants, and cronyistic
boards themselves) have put incentives in place for CEOs to favor
shareholders over parties that otherwise should get better treatment. So
is it any surprise that companies treat employees like toilet paper,
squeeze vendors, lobby hard for tax breaks and to weaken regulations,
and worse, like fudge their financial reports? Jensen himself, in 2005,
repudiated his earlier prescription precisely because it led to fraud.
From
an interview with the New York Times:
Q. So the maximum stock price is the holy grail?
A. Absolutely not. Warren Buffett says he worries as much when
one of his companies becomes overvalued as undervalued. I agree.
Overvalued equity is managerial heroin – it feels really great when
you start out; you’re feted on television; investment bankers vie to
float new issues.
But it doesn’t take long before the elation and ecstasy turn into
enormous pain. The market starts demanding increased earnings and
revenues, and the managers begin to say: “Holy Moley! How are we
going to generate the returns?” They look for legal loopholes in the
accounting, and when those don’t work, even basically honest people
move around the corner to outright fraud.
If they hold a lot of stock or options themselves, it is like
pouring gasoline on a fire. They fudge the numbers and hope they can
sell the stock or exercise the options before anything hits the fan.
Q. Are you suggesting that executives be rewarded for driving
down the price of the stock?
A. I’m saying they should be rewarded for being honest. A C.E.O.
should be able to tell investors, “Listen, this company isn’t worth
its $70 billion market cap; it’s really worth $30 billion, and
here’s why.”
But the board would fire that executive immediately. I guess it
has to be preventative – if executives would present the market with
realistic numbers rather than overoptimistic expectations, the stock
price would stay realistic. But I admit, we scholars don’t yet know
the real answer to how to make this happen.
So having led Corporate America in the wrong direction, Jensen
‘fesses up no one knows the way out. But if executives weren’t
incentivized to take such a topsy-turvey shareholder-driven view of the
world, they’d weigh their obligations to other constituencies, including
the community at large, along with earning shareholders a decent return.
But it’s now become so institutionalized it’s hard to see how to move to
a more sensible regime. For instance, analysts regularly try pressuring
Costco to pay its workers less, wanting fatter margins. But the
comparatively high wages are
an integral part of Costco’s formula: it reduces costly staff
turnover and employee pilferage. And Costco’s upscale members report
they prefer to patronize a store they know treats workers better than
Walmart and other discounters. If managers with an established,
successful formulas still encounter pressure from the Street to strip
mine their companies, imagine how hard it is for struggling companies or
less secure top executives to implement strategies that will take a
while to reap rewards. I’ve been getting reports from McKinsey from the
better part of a decade that they simply can’t get their clients to
implement new initiatives if they’ll dent quarterly returns.
This governance system is actually in crisis, but the extraordinary
profit share that companies have managed to achieve by squeezing workers
and the asset-goosing success of post-crisis financial policies have
produced an illusion of health. But porcine maquillage only improves
appearances; it doesn’t mask the stench of gangrene. Nevertheless,
executives have successfully hidden the generally unhealthy state of
their companies. As long as they have cheerleading analysts, complacent
boards and the Fed protecting their back, they can likely continue to
inflict more damage, using “maximizing shareholder value” canard as the
cover for continuing rent extraction.
Read more at
http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2013/10/why-the-maximizing-shareholder-value-theory-of-corporate-governance-is-bogus.html#ehj10weqAL2vdXkh.99
So how did this “the last shall come first” thinking become established?
You can blame it all on economists, specifically Harvard Business
School’s Michael Jensen. In other words, this idea did not come out of
legal analysis, changes in regulation, or court decisions. It was simply
an academic theory that went mainstream. And to add insult to injury,
the version of the Jensen formula that became popular was its worst
possible embodiment.
A terrific 2010 paper by Frank Dobbin and Jiwook
Jung, “The
Misapplication of Mr. Michael Jensen: How Agency Theory Brought Down the
Economy and Might Do It Again,” explains how this line of thinking
went mainstream. I strongly suggest you read it in full, but I’ll give a
brief recap for the time-pressed.
In the 1970s, there was a great deal of hand-wringing in America as
Japanese and German manufacturers were eating American’s lunch. That led
to renewed examination of how US companies were managed, with lots of
theorizing about what went wrong and what the remedies might be. In
1976, Jensen and William Meckling asserted that the problem was that
corporate executives served their own interests rather than those of
shareholders, in other words, that there was an agency problem.
Executives wanted to build empires while shareholders wanted profits to
be maximized.
I strongly suspect that if Jensen and Meckling had not come out with
this line of thinking, you would have gotten something similar to
justify the actions of the leveraged buyout kings, who were just getting
started in the 1970s and were reshaping the corporate landscape by the
mid-1980s. They were doing many of the things Jensen and Meckling
recommended: breaking up multi-business companies, thinning out
corporate centers, and selling corporate assets (some of which were
clearly excess, like corporate art and jet collection, while other sales
were simply to increase leverage, like selling corporate office
buildings and leasing them back). In other words, a likely reason that
Jensen and Meckling’s theory gained traction was it appeared to validate
a fundamental challenge to incumbent managements. (Dobbin and Jung
attribute this trend, as pretty much everyone does, to Jensen because he
continued to develop it. What really put it on the map was a 1990
Harvard Business Review article, “It’s
Not What You Pay CEOs, but How,” that led to an explosion in the use
of option-based pay and resulted in a huge increase in CEO pay relative
to that of average workers.)
To forestall takeovers, many companies implemented the measures an
LBO artist might take before his invading army arrived: sell off
non-core divisions, borrow more, shed staff.
The problem was to the extent that the Jensen/Meckling prescription
had merit, only the parts that helped company executives were adopted.
Jensen didn’t just call on executives to become less ministerial and
more entrepreneurial; they also called for more independent and engaged
boards to oversee and discipline top managers, and more equity-driven
pay, both options and other equity-linked compensation, to make
management more sensitive to both upside and downside risks.
Over the next two decades, companies levered up, became more
short-term oriented, and executive pay levels exploded. As Dobbin and
Jung put it, “The result of the changes promoted by agency theory was
that by the late 1990s, corporate America’s leaders were drag racing
without the brakes.”
The paper proceeds to analyze in considerable detail how three of the
major prescriptions of “agency theory” aka “executives and boards should
maximize value,” namely, pay for (mythical) performance,
dediversification, and greater reliance on debt all increased risk. And
the authors also detail how efforts to improve oversight were
ineffective.
But the paper also makes clear that this vision of how companies
should be run was simply a new management fashion, as opposed to any
sort of legal requirement:
Organizational institutionalists have long argued that new
management practices diffuse through networks of firms like fads
spread through high schools….In their models, new paradigms are
socially constructed as appropriate solutions to perceived problems
or crises….Expert groups that stand to gain from having their
preferred strategies adopted by firms then enter the void, competing
to have their model adopted….
And as Dobbin and Jung point out, the parts of the Jensen formula
that got adopted were the one that had constituents. The ones that
promoted looting and short-termism had obvious followings. The ones for
prudent management didn’t.
And consider the implications of Jensen’s prescriptions, of pushing
companies to favor shareholders, when they actually stand at the back of
the line from a legal perspective. The result is that various agents
(board compensation consultants, management consultants, and cronyistic
boards themselves) have put incentives in place for CEOs to favor
shareholders over parties that otherwise should get better treatment. So
is it any surprise that companies treat employees like toilet paper,
squeeze vendors, lobby hard for tax breaks and to weaken regulations,
and worse, like fudge their financial reports? Jensen himself, in 2005,
repudiated his earlier prescription precisely because it led to fraud.
From
an interview with the New York Times:
Q. So the maximum stock price is the holy grail?
A. Absolutely not. Warren Buffett says he worries as much when
one of his companies becomes overvalued as undervalued. I agree.
Overvalued equity is managerial heroin – it feels really great when
you start out; you’re feted on television; investment bankers vie to
float new issues.
But it doesn’t take long before the elation and ecstasy turn into
enormous pain. The market starts demanding increased earnings and
revenues, and the managers begin to say: “Holy Moley! How are we
going to generate the returns?” They look for legal loopholes in the
accounting, and when those don’t work, even basically honest people
move around the corner to outright fraud.
If they hold a lot of stock or options themselves, it is like
pouring gasoline on a fire. They fudge the numbers and hope they can
sell the stock or exercise the options before anything hits the fan.
Q. Are you suggesting that executives be rewarded for driving
down the price of the stock?
A. I’m saying they should be rewarded for being honest. A C.E.O.
should be able to tell investors, “Listen, this company isn’t worth
its $70 billion market cap; it’s really worth $30 billion, and
here’s why.”
But the board would fire that executive immediately. I guess it
has to be preventative – if executives would present the market with
realistic numbers rather than overoptimistic expectations, the stock
price would stay realistic. But I admit, we scholars don’t yet know
the real answer to how to make this happen.
So having led Corporate America in the wrong direction, Jensen
‘fesses up no one knows the way out. But if executives weren’t
incentivized to take such a topsy-turvey shareholder-driven view of the
world, they’d weigh their obligations to other constituencies, including
the community at large, along with earning shareholders a decent return.
But it’s now become so institutionalized it’s hard to see how to move to
a more sensible regime. For instance, analysts regularly try pressuring
Costco to pay its workers less, wanting fatter margins. But the
comparatively high wages are
an integral part of Costco’s formula: it reduces costly staff
turnover and employee pilferage. And Costco’s upscale members report
they prefer to patronize a store they know treats workers better than
Walmart and other discounters. If managers with an established,
successful formulas still encounter pressure from the Street to strip
mine their companies, imagine how hard it is for struggling companies or
less secure top executives to implement strategies that will take a
while to reap rewards. I’ve been getting reports from McKinsey from the
better part of a decade that they simply can’t get their clients to
implement new initiatives if they’ll dent quarterly returns.
This governance system is actually in crisis, but the extraordinary
profit share that companies have managed to achieve by squeezing workers
and the asset-goosing success of post-crisis financial policies have
produced an illusion of health. But porcine maquillage only improves
appearances; it doesn’t mask the stench of gangrene. Nevertheless,
executives have successfully hidden the generally unhealthy state of
their companies. As long as they have cheerleading analysts, complacent
boards and the Fed protecting their back, they can likely continue to
inflict more damage, using “maximizing shareholder value” canard as the
cover for continuing rent extraction.
Read more at
http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2013/10/why-the-maximizing-shareholder-value-theory-of-corporate-governance-is-bogus.html#ehj10weqAL2vdXkh.99
So how did this “the last shall come first” thinking become established? You
can blame it all on economists, specifically Harvard Business School’s
Michael Jensen. In other words, this idea did not come out of legal
analysis, changes in regulation, or court decisions. It was simply an
academic theory that went mainstream. And to add insult to injury, the
version of the Jensen formula that became popular was its worst possible
embodiment.
A
terrific 2010 paper by Frank Dobbin and Jiwook Jung,
“The
Misapplication of Mr. Michael Jensen: How Agency Theory Brought Down the
Economy and Might Do It Again,”
explains how this line of thinking went mainstream. I strongly suggest you
read it in full, but I’ll give a brief recap for the time-pressed.
In the 1970s, there was a great deal of hand-wringing in America as Japanese
and German manufacturers were eating American’s lunch. That led to renewed
examination of how US companies were managed, with lots of theorizing about
what went wrong and what the remedies might be. In 1976, Jensen and William
Meckling asserted that the problem was that corporate executives served
their own interests rather than those of shareholders, in other words, that
there was an agency problem. Executives wanted to build empires while
shareholders wanted profits to be maximized.
I
strongly suspect that if Jensen and Meckling had not come out with this line
of thinking, you would have gotten something similar to justify the actions
of the leveraged buyout kings, who were just getting started in the 1970s
and were reshaping the corporate landscape by the mid-1980s. They were doing
many of the things Jensen and Meckling recommended: breaking up
multi-business companies, thinning out corporate centers, and selling
corporate assets (some of which were clearly excess, like corporate art and
jet collection, while other sales were simply to increase leverage, like
selling corporate office buildings and leasing them back). In other words, a
likely reason that Jensen and Meckling’s theory gained traction was it
appeared to validate a fundamental challenge to incumbent managements.
(Dobbin and Jung attribute this trend, as pretty much everyone does, to
Jensen because he continued to develop it. What really put it on the map was
a 1990 Harvard Business Review article,
“It’s
Not What You Pay CEOs, but How,”
that
led to an explosion in the use of option-based pay and resulted in a huge
increase in CEO pay relative to that of average workers.)
To forestall takeovers, many companies implemented the measures an LBO
artist might take before his invading army arrived: sell off non-core
divisions, borrow more, shed staff.
The problem was to the extent that the Jensen/Meckling prescription had
merit, only the parts that helped company executives were adopted. Jensen
didn’t just call on executives to become less ministerial and more
entrepreneurial; they also called for more independent and engaged boards to
oversee and discipline top managers, and more equity-driven pay, both
options and other equity-linked compensation, to make management more
sensitive to both upside and downside risks.
Over the next two decades, companies levered up, became more short-term
oriented, and executive pay levels exploded. As Dobbin and Jung put it, “The
result of the changes promoted by agency theory was that by the late 1990s,
corporate America’s leaders were drag racing without the brakes.”
The paper proceeds to analyze in considerable detail how three of the major
prescriptions of “agency theory” aka “executives and boards should maximize
value,” namely, pay for (mythical) performance, dediversification, and
greater reliance on debt all increased risk. And the authors also detail how
efforts to improve oversight were ineffective.
But the paper also makes clear that this vision of how companies should be
run was simply a new management fashion, as opposed to any sort of legal
requirement:
Organizational institutionalists have long argued that new management
practices diffuse through networks of firms like fads spread through high
schools….In their models, new paradigms are socially constructed as
appropriate solutions to perceived problems or crises….Expert groups that
stand to gain from having their preferred strategies adopted by firms then
enter the void, competing to have their model adopted….
And as Dobbin and Jung point out, the parts of the Jensen formula that got
adopted were the one that had constituents. The ones that promoted looting
and short-termism had obvious followings. The ones for prudent management
didn’t.
And
consider the implications of Jensen’s prescriptions, of pushing companies to
favor shareholders, when they actually stand at the back of the line from a
legal perspective. The result is that various agents (board compensation
consultants, management consultants, and cronyistic boards themselves) have
put incentives in place for CEOs to favor shareholders over parties that
otherwise should get better treatment. So is it any surprise that companies
treat employees like toilet paper, squeeze vendors, lobby hard for tax
breaks and to weaken regulations, and worse, like fudge their financial
reports? Jensen himself, in 2005, repudiated his earlier prescription
precisely because it led to fraud. From
an interview with the New York
Times:
Q. So the maximum stock price is the holy grail?
A. Absolutely not. Warren Buffett says he worries as much when one of his
companies becomes overvalued as undervalued. I agree. Overvalued equity is
managerial heroin – it feels really great when you start out; you’re feted
on television; investment bankers vie to float new issues.
But it doesn’t take long before the elation and ecstasy turn into enormous
pain. The market starts demanding increased earnings and revenues, and the
managers begin to say: “Holy Moley! How are we going to generate the
returns?” They look for legal loopholes in the accounting, and when those
don’t work, even basically honest people move around the corner to outright
fraud.
If they hold a lot of stock or options themselves, it is like pouring
gasoline on a fire. They fudge the numbers and hope they can sell the stock
or exercise the options before anything hits the fan.
Q. Are you suggesting that executives be rewarded for driving down the price
of the stock?
A. I’m saying they should be rewarded for being honest. A C.E.O. should be
able to tell investors, “Listen, this company isn’t worth its $70 billion
market cap; it’s really worth $30 billion, and here’s why.”
But the board would fire that executive immediately. I guess it has to be
preventative – if executives would present the market with realistic numbers
rather than overoptimistic expectations, the stock price would stay
realistic. But I admit, we scholars don’t yet know the real answer to how to
make this happen.
So
having led Corporate America in the wrong direction, Jensen ‘fesses up no
one knows the way out. But if executives weren’t incentivized to take such a
topsy-turvey shareholder-driven view of the world, they’d weigh their
obligations to other constituencies, including the community at large, along
with earning shareholders a decent return. But it’s now become so
institutionalized it’s hard to see how to move to a more sensible regime.
For instance, analysts regularly try pressuring Costco to pay its workers
less, wanting fatter margins. But the
comparatively high wages are an integral part of
Costco’s formula:
it
reduces costly staff turnover and employee pilferage. And Costco’s upscale
members report they prefer to patronize a store they know treats workers
better than Walmart and other discounters. If managers with an established,
successful formulas still encounter pressure from the Street to strip mine
their companies, imagine how hard it is for struggling companies or less
secure top executives to implement strategies that will take a while to reap
rewards. I’ve been getting reports from McKinsey from the better part of a
decade that they simply can’t get their clients to implement new initiatives
if they’ll dent quarterly returns.
This governance system is actually in crisis, but the extraordinary profit
share that companies have managed to achieve by squeezing workers and the
asset-goosing success of post-crisis financial policies have produced an
illusion of health. But porcine maquillage only improves appearances; it
doesn’t mask the stench of gangrene. Nevertheless, executives have
successfully hidden the generally unhealthy state of their companies. As
long as they have cheerleading analysts, complacent boards and the Fed
protecting their back, they can likely continue to inflict more damage,
using “maximizing shareholder value” canard as the cover for continuing rent
extraction.
Read more at
http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2013/10/why-the-maximizing-shareholder-value-theory-of-corporate-governance-is-bogus.html#ehj10weqAL2vdXkh.99
Jensen Comment
Mike Jensen was the headliner at the 2013 American Accounting Association Annual
Meetings. AAA members can watch various videos by him and about him at the AAA
Commons Website.
Actually Al Rappaport at Northwestern may have been more influential in
spreading the word about creating shareholder value ---
Rappaport, Alfred
(1998).
Creating Shareholder Value: A guide for managers and investors. New
York: The Free Press. pp. 13–29.
It would be interesting if Mike Jensen and/or Al
Rappaport wrote rebuttals to this article.
Bob Jensen's threads on triple-bottom
reporting ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory02.htm#TripleBottom
Bob Jensen's threads on theory are at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm
"How Non-Scientific Granulation Can
Improve Scientific Accountics"
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/temp/AccounticsGranulationCurrentDraft.pdf
By Bob Jensen
This essay takes off from the following quotation:
A recent accountics science study suggests
that audit firm scandal with respect to someone else's audit may be a reason
for changing auditors.
"Audit Quality and Auditor Reputation: Evidence from Japan," by Douglas J.
Skinner and Suraj Srinivasan, The Accounting Review, September 2012,
Vol. 87, No. 5, pp. 1737-1765.
Our conclusions are subject
to two caveats. First, we find that clients switched away from ChuoAoyama in
large numbers in Spring 2006, just after Japanese regulators announced the
two-month suspension and PwC formed Aarata. While we interpret these events
as being a clear and undeniable signal of audit-quality problems at
ChuoAoyama, we cannot know for sure what drove these switches
(emphasis added).
It is possible that the suspension caused firms to switch auditors for
reasons unrelated to audit quality. Second, our analysis presumes that audit
quality is important to Japanese companies. While we believe this to be the
case, especially over the past two decades as Japanese capital markets have
evolved to be more like their Western counterparts, it is possible
that audit quality is, in general, less important in Japan
(emphasis added) .
Replication Paranoia: Can you imagine anything like this happening
in accountics science?
"Is Psychology About to Come Undone?" by Tom Bartlett, Chronicle of
Higher Education, April 17, 2012 ---
Click Here
http://chronicle.com/blogs/percolator/is-psychology-about-to-come-undone/29045?sid=at&utm_source=at&utm_medium=en
If you’re a psychologist, the news has to make you
a little nervous—particularly if you’re a psychologist who published an
article in 2008 in any of these three journals: Psychological Science,
the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, or the
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition.
Because, if you did, someone is going to check your
work. A group of researchers have already begun what they’ve dubbed
the Reproducibility Project, which aims to
replicate every study from those three journals for that one year. The
project is part of Open Science Framework, a group interested in scientific
values, and its stated mission is to “estimate the reproducibility of a
sample of studies from the scientific literature.” This is a more polite way
of saying “We want to see how much of what gets published turns out to be
bunk.”
For decades, literally, there has been talk about
whether what makes it into the pages of psychology journals—or the journals
of other disciplines, for that matter—is actually, you know, true.
Researchers anxious for novel, significant, career-making findings have an
incentive to publish their successes while neglecting to mention their
failures. It’s what the psychologist Robert Rosenthal named “the file drawer
effect.” So if an experiment is run ten times but pans out only once you
trumpet the exception rather than the rule. Or perhaps a researcher is
unconsciously biasing a study somehow. Or maybe he or she is flat-out faking
results, which is not unheard of.
Diederik Stapel, we’re looking at you.
So why not check? Well, for a lot of reasons. It’s
time-consuming and doesn’t do much for your career to replicate other
researchers’ findings. Journal editors aren’t exactly jazzed about
publishing replications. And potentially undermining someone else’s research
is not a good way to make friends.
Brian Nosek
knows all that and he’s doing it anyway. Nosek, a
professor of psychology at the University of Virginia, is one of the
coordinators of the project. He’s careful not to make it sound as if he’s
attacking his own field. “The project does not aim to single out anybody,”
he says. He notes that being unable to replicate a finding is not the same
as discovering that the finding is false. It’s not always possible to match
research methods precisely, and researchers performing replications can make
mistakes, too.
But still. If it turns out that a sizable
percentage (a quarter? half?) of the results published in these three top
psychology journals can’t be replicated, it’s not going to reflect well on
the field or on the researchers whose papers didn’t pass the test. In the
long run, coming to grips with the scope of the problem is almost certainly
beneficial for everyone. In the short run, it might get ugly.
Nosek told Science that a senior colleague
warned him not to take this on “because psychology is under threat and this
could make us look bad.” In a Google discussion group, one of the
researchers involved in the project wrote that it was important to stay “on
message” and portray the effort to the news media as “protecting our
science, not tearing it down.”
The researchers point out, fairly, that it’s not
just social psychology that has to deal with this issue. Recently, a
scientist named C. Glenn Begley attempted to replicate 53 cancer studies he
deemed landmark publications. He could only replicate six. Six! Last
December
I interviewed Christopher Chabris about his paper
titled “Most Reported Genetic Associations with General Intelligence Are
Probably False Positives.” Most!
A related new endeavour called
Psych File Drawer
allows psychologists to upload their attempts to
replicate studies. So far nine studies have been uploaded and only three of
them were successes.
Both Psych File Drawer and the Reproducibility
Project were started in part because it’s hard to get a replication
published even when a study cries out for one. For instance, Daryl J. Bem’s
2011 study that seemed to prove that extra-sensory perception is real — that
subjects could, in a limited sense, predict the future —
got no shortage of attention and seemed to turn
everything we know about the world upside-down.
Yet when Stuart Ritchie, a doctoral student in
psychology at the University of Edinburgh, and two colleagues failed to
replicate his findings, they had
a heck of a time
getting the results into print (they finally did, just recently, after
months of trying). It may not be a coincidence that the journal that
published Bem’s findings, the Journal of Personality and Social
Psychology, is one of the three selected for scrutiny.
Continued in article
Jensen Comment
Scale Risk
In accountics science such a "Reproducibility Project" would be much more
problematic except in behavioral accounting research. This is because accountics
scientists generally buy rather than generate their own data (Zoe-Vonna Palmrose
is an exception). The problem with purchased data from such as CRSP data,
Compustat data, and AuditAnalytics data is that it's virtually impossible to
generate alternate data sets, and if there are hidden serious errors in the data
it can unknowingly wipe out thousands of accountics science publications all at
one --- what we might call a "scale risk."
Assumptions Risk
A second problem in accounting and finance research is that researchers tend to
rely upon the same models over and over again. And when serious flaws were
discovered in a model like CAPM it not only raised doubts about thousands of
past studies, it made accountics and finance researchers make choices about
whether or not to change their CAPM habits in the future. Accountics researchers
that generally look for an easy way out blindly continued to use CAPM in
conspiracy with journal referees and editors who silently agreed to ignore CAPM
problems and limitations of assumptions about efficiency in capital markets---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#EMH
We might call this an "assumptions risk."
Hence I do not anticipate that there will ever be a Reproducibility Project
in accountics science. Horrors. Accountics scientists might not continue to be
the highest paid faculty on their respected campuses and accounting doctoral
programs would not know how to proceed if they had to start focusing on
accounting rather than econometrics.
Bob Jensen's threads on replication and other forms of validity checking
---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/TheoryTAR.htm
Ockham’s (or Occam's) Razor (Law of Parsimony and Succinctness) ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ockham's_razor
"Razoring Ockham’s razor," by Massimo Pigliucci, Rationally
Speaking, May 6, 2011 ---
http://rationallyspeaking.blogspot.com/2011/05/razoring-ockhams-razor.html
Scientists, philosophers and skeptics alike are
familiar with the idea of Ockham’s razor, an epistemological principle
formulated in a number of ways by the English Franciscan friar and
scholastic
philosopher William of Ockham (1288-1348).
Here is one version of it, from the pen of its originator:
Frustra fit per plura quod potest
fieri per pauciora. [It is futile to do with more things that which can
be done with fewer] (Summa Totius Logicae)
Philosophers often refer to this as
the principle of economy, while scientists tend to call it parsimony.
Skeptics invoke it every time they wish to dismiss out of hand claims of
unusual phenomena (after all, to invoke the “unusual” is by definition
unparsimonious, so there).
There is a problem with all of this, however, of
which I was reminded recently while reading an old paper by my colleague
Elliot Sober, one of the most prominent contemporary philosophers of
biology. Sober’s article is provocatively entitled “Let’s razor Ockham’s
razor” and it is available for download from
his web site.
Let me begin by reassuring you that Sober didn’t
throw the razor in the trash. However, he cut it down to size, so to
speak. The obvious question to ask about Ockham’s razor is: why? On what
basis are we justified to think that, as a matter of general practice,
the simplest hypothesis is the most likely one to be true? Setting aside
the surprisingly difficult task of operationally defining “simpler” in
the context of scientific hypotheses (it can be done, but only
in certain domains,
and it ain’t straightforward), there doesn’t seem
to be any particular logical or metaphysical reason to believe that the
universe is a simple as it could be.
Indeed, we know it’s not. The history
of science is replete with examples of simpler (“more elegant,” if you
are aesthetically inclined) hypotheses that had to yield to more clumsy
and complicated ones. The Keplerian idea of elliptical planetary orbits
is demonstrably more complicated than the Copernican one of circular
orbits (because it takes more parameters to define an ellipse than a
circle), and yet, planets do in fact run around the gravitational center
of the solar system in ellipses, not circles.
Lee Smolin (in his delightful
The Trouble with Physics)
gives us a good history of 20th century physics,
replete with a veritable cemetery of hypotheses that people thought
“must” have been right because they were so simple and beautiful, and
yet turned out to be wrong because the data stubbornly contradicted
them.
In Sober’s paper you will find a
discussion of two uses of Ockham’s razor in biology, George Williams’
famous critique of group selection, and “cladistic” phylogenetic
analyses. In the first case, Williams argued that individual- or
gene-level selective explanations are preferable to group-selective
explanations because they are more parsimonious. In the second case,
modern systematists use parsimony to reconstruct the most likely
phylogenetic relationships among species, assuming that a smaller number
of independent evolutionary changes is more likely than a larger number.
Part of the problem is that we do
have examples of both group selection (not many, but they are there),
and of non-parsimonious evolutionary paths, which means that at best
Ockham’s razor can be used as a first approximation heuristic, not as a
sound principle of scientific inference.
And it gets worse before it gets
better. Sober cites Aristotle, who chided Plato for hypostatizing The
Good. You see, Plato was always running around asking what makes for a
Good Musician, or a Good General. By using the word Good in all these
inquiries, he came to believe that all these activities have something
fundamental in common, that there is a general concept of Good that gets
instantiated in being a good musician, general, etc. But that, of
course, is nonsense on stilts, since what makes for a good musician has
nothing whatsoever to do with what makes for a good general.
Analogously, suggests Sober, the
various uses of Ockham’s razor have no metaphysical or logical universal
principle in common — despite what many scientists, skeptics and even
philosophers seem to think. Williams was correct, group selection is
less likely than individual selection (though not impossible), and the
cladists are correct too that parsimony is usually a good way to
evaluate competitive phylogenetic hypotheses. But the two cases (and
many others) do not share any universal property in common.
What’s going on, then? Sober’s solution is to
invoke the famous
Duhem thesis.**
Pierre Duhem suggested in 1908 that, as Sober puts
it: “it is wrong to think that hypothesis H makes predictions about
observation O; it is the conjunction of H&A [where A is a set of
auxiliary hypotheses] that issues in testable consequences.”
This means that, for instance, when astronomer
Arthur Eddington “tested”
Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity during a
famous 1919 total eclipse of the Sun — by showing that the Sun’s
gravitational mass was indeed deflecting starlight by exactly the amount
predicted by Einstein — he was not, strictly speaking doing any such
thing. Eddington was testing Einstein’s theory given a set of
auxiliary hypotheses, a set that included independent estimates of
the mass of the sun, the laws of optics that allowed the telescopes to
work, the precision of measurement of stellar positions, and even the
technical processing of the resulting photographs. Had Eddington failed
to confirm the hypotheses this would not (necessarily) have spelled the
death of Einstein’s theory (since confirmed
in many other ways).
The failure could have resulted from the failure
of any of the auxiliary hypotheses instead.
This is both why there is no such
thing as a “crucial” experiment in science (you always need to repeat
them under a variety of conditions), and why naive Popperian
falsificationism is wrong (you can never falsify a hypothesis directly,
only the H&A complex can be falsified).
What does this have to do with
Ockham’s razor? The Duhem thesis explains why Sober is right, I think,
in maintaining that the razor works (when it does) given certain
background assumptions that are bound to be discipline- and
problem-specific. So, for instance, Williams’ reasoning about group
selection isn’t correct because of some generic logical property of
parsimony (as Williams himself apparently thought), but because — given
the sorts of things that living organisms and populations are, how
natural selection works, and a host of other biological details — it is
indeed much more likely than not that individual and not group selective
explanations will do the work in most specific instances. But that set
of biological reasons is quite different from the set that
cladists use in justifying their use of parsimony to reconstruct
organismal phylogenies. And needless to say, neither of these two sets
of auxiliary assumptions has anything to do with the instances of
successful deployment of the razor by physicists, for example.
Continued in article
Note the comments that follow
August 21, 2012 message from Amy Dunbar
Jensen Quotation
"Of course you, Amy, know this since you prepare technical tax learning
Camtasia videos for your tax students. I suspect you also prepare technical
software learning videos (such as how to run a GLM model in SAS)."
Actually I record Stata videos. I much prefer Stata
to SAS. ;-)
Amy
Stata ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stata
SAS ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SAS_%28software%29
574 Shields Against Validity Challenges in
Plato's Cave ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/TheoryTAR.htm
- With a Rejoinder from the 2010 Senior Editor of
The Accounting Review (TAR), Steven J. Kachelmeier
- With Replies in Appendix 4 to Professor Kachemeier
by Professors Jagdish Gangolly and Paul Williams
- With Added Conjectures in Appendix 1 as to Why the
Profession of Accountancy Ignores TAR
- With Suggestions in Appendix 2 for Incorporating
Accounting Research into Undergraduate Accounting Courses
Gaming for Tenure as an Accounting
Professor ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/TheoryTenure.htm
(with a reply about tenure publication point systems from Linda Kidwell)
"So you want to get a Ph.D.?" by David Wood, BYU ---
http://www.byuaccounting.net/mediawiki/index.php?title=So_you_want_to_get_a_Ph.D.%3F
Do You Want to Teach? ---
http://financialexecutives.blogspot.com/2009/05/do-you-want-to-teach.html
Jensen Comment
Here are some added positives and negatives to consider, especially if you are
currently a practicing accountant considering becoming a professor.
Accountancy Doctoral Program Information from Jim Hasselback ---
http://www.jrhasselback.com/AtgDoctInfo.html
Why must all accounting doctoral programs be social science (particularly
econometrics) "accountics" doctoral programs?
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#DoctoralPrograms
What went wrong in accounting/accountics research?
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#WhatWentWrong
AN ANALYSIS OF THE
EVOLUTION OF RESEARCH CONTRIBUTIONS BY THE ACCOUNTING REVIEW: 1926-2005 ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/395wpTAR/Web/TAR395wp.htm#_msocom_1
Systemic problems of accountancy
(especially the vegetable nutrition paradox) that probably will never be solved
---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudConclusion.htm#BadNews
AN ANALYSIS OF THE
EVOLUTION OF RESEARCH CONTRIBUTIONS BY THE ACCOUNTING REVIEW: 1926-2005 ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/395wpTAR/Web/TAR395wp.htm#_msocom_1
Systemic problems of accountancy
(especially the vegetable nutrition paradox) that probably will never be solved
---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudConclusion.htm#BadNews
"The Accounting Doctoral Shortage: Time for a New
Model,"
by Neal Mero, Jan R. Williams and George W. Krull, Jr. .
Issues in Accounting Education 24 (4)
http://aaapubs.aip.org/getabs/servlet/GetabsServlet?prog=normal&id=IAEXXX000024000004000427000001&idtype=cvips&gifs=Yes&ref=no
ABSTRACT:
The crisis in supply versus demand for doctorally qualified faculty members in
accounting is well documented (Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of
Business [AACSB] 2003a, 2003b; Plumlee et al. 2005; Leslie 2008). Little
progress has been made in addressing this serious challenge facing the
accounting academic community and the accounting profession. Faculty time,
institutional incentives, the doctoral model itself, and research diversity are
noted as major challenges to making progress on this issue. The authors propose
six recommendations, including a new, extramurally funded research program aimed
at supporting doctoral students that functions similar to research programs
supported by such organizations as the National Science Foundation and other
science-based funding sources. The goal is to create capacity, improve
structures for doctoral programs, and provide incentives to enhance doctoral
enrollments. This should lead to an increased supply of graduates while also
enhancing and supporting broad-based research outcomes across the accounting
landscape, including auditing and tax. ©2009 American Accounting Association
Bob Jensen's threads on accountancy doctoral programs
are at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#DoctoralPrograms
Steven J. Kachelmeier's July 2011 Editorial as Departing Senior Editor of
The Accounting Review (TAR)
"Introduction to a Forum on Internal Control Reporting and Corporate Debt,"
by Steven J. Kachelmeier, The Accounting Review, Vol. 86, No. 4, July
2011 pp. 1129–113 (not free online) ---
http://aaapubs.aip.org/getpdf/servlet/GetPDFServlet?filetype=pdf&id=ACRVAS000086000004001129000001&idtype=cvips&prog=normal
One of the more surprising things I
have learned from my experience as Senior Editor of
The Accounting Review
is just how often a
‘‘hot
topic’’
generates multiple
submissions that pursue similar research objectives. Though one might view
such situations as enhancing the credibility of research findings through
the independent efforts of multiple research teams, they often result in
unfavorable reactions from reviewers who question the incremental
contribution of a subsequent study that does not materially advance the
findings already documented in a previous study, even if the two (or more)
efforts were initiated independently and pursued more or less concurrently.
I understand the reason for a high incremental contribution standard in a
top-tier journal that faces capacity constraints and deals with about 500
new submissions per year. Nevertheless, I must admit that I sometimes feel
bad writing a rejection letter on a good study, just because some other
research team beat the authors to press with similar conclusions documented
a few months earlier. Research, it seems, operates in a highly competitive
arena.
Fortunately, from time to time, we
receive related but still distinct submissions that, in combination, capture
synergies (and reviewer support) by viewing a broad research question from
different perspectives. The two articles comprising this issue’s forum are a
classic case in point. Though both studies reach the same basic conclusion
that material weaknesses in internal controls over financial reporting
result in negative repercussions for the cost of debt financing, Dhaliwal et
al. (2011) do so by examining the public market for corporate debt
instruments, whereas Kim et al. (2011) examine private debt contracting with
financial institutions. These different perspectives enable the two research
teams to pursue different secondary analyses, such as Dhaliwal et al.’s
examination of the sensitivity of the reported findings to bank monitoring
and Kim et al.’s examination of debt covenants.
Both studies also overlap with yet a
third recent effort in this arena, recently published in the
Journal of Accounting
Research by Costello and
Wittenberg-Moerman (2011). Although the overall
‘‘punch
line’’
is similar in all three studies (material
internal control weaknesses result in a higher cost of debt), I am intrigued
by a ‘‘mini-debate’’
of sorts on the different conclusions
reache by Costello and Wittenberg-Moerman (2011) and by Kim et al.
(2011) for the effect of material weaknesses on debt covenants.
Specifically, Costello and Wittenberg-Moerman (2011, 116) find that
‘‘serious,
fraud-related weaknesses result in a significant decrease in financial
covenants,’’
presumably because banks substitute more
direct protections in such instances, whereas Kim et al.
Published Online: July 2011
(2011) assert from their cross-sectional
design that company-level material weaknesses are associated with
more
financial covenants in
debt contracting.
In reconciling these conflicting
findings, Costello and Wittenberg-Moerman (2011, 116) attribute the Kim et
al. (2011) result to underlying
‘‘differences
in more fundamental firm characteristics, such as riskiness and information
opacity,’’
given that, cross-sectionally, material
weakness firms have a greater number of financial covenants than do
non-material weakness firms even
before the disclosure of the material
weakness in internal controls. Kim et al. (2011) counter that they control
for risk and opacity characteristics, and that advance leakage of internal
control problems could still result in a debt covenant effect due to
internal controls rather than underlying firm characteristics. Kim et al.
(2011) also report from a supplemental change analysis that, comparing the
pre- and post-SOX 404 periods, the number of debt covenants falls for
companies both with and without
material
weaknesses in internal controls, raising the question of whether the
Costello and Wittenberg-Moerman (2011)
finding reflects a reaction to the disclosures or simply a more general
trend of a declining number of debt covenants affecting all firms around
that time period. I urge readers to take a look at both articles, along with
Dhaliwal et al. (2011), and draw their own conclusions. Indeed, I believe
that these sorts . . .
Continued in article
Jensen Comment
Without admitting to it, I think Steve has been embarrassed, along with many
other accountics researchers, about the virtual absence of validation and
replication of accounting science (accountics) research studies over the past
five decades. For the most part, accountics articles are either ignored or
accepted as truth without validation. Behavioral and capital markets empirical
studies are rarely (ever?) replicated. Analytical studies make tremendous leaps
of faith in terms of underlying assumptions that are rarely challenged (such as
the assumption of equations depicting utility functions of corporations).
Accounting science thereby has become a pseudo
science where highly paid accountics professor referees are protecting each
others' butts ---
"574 Shields Against Validity Challenges in Plato's Cave" ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/TheoryTAR.htm
The above link contains Steve's rejoinders on the replication debate.
In the above editorial he's telling us that there is a middle ground for
validation of accountics studies. When researchers independently come to similar
conclusions using different data sets and different quantitative analyses they
are in a sense validating each others' work without truly replicating each
others' work.
I agree with Steve on this, but I would also argue that these types of
"validation" is too little to late relative to genuine science where replication
and true validation are essential to the very definition of science. The types
independent but related research that Steve is discussing above is too
infrequent and haphazard to fall into the realm of validation and replication.
When's the last time you witnesses a TAR author criticizing the research of
another TAR author (TAR does not publish critical commentaries)?
Are TAR articles really all that above criticism?
Even though I admire Steve's scholarship, dedication,
and sacrifice, I hope future TAR editors will work harder at turning accountics
research into real science!
What Went Wrong With Accountics Research? ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#WhatWentWrong
"574 Shields Against Validity Challenges in Plato's Cave" ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/TheoryTAR.htm
Some Accounting News Sites and Related Links
Bob Jensen
at
Trinity University
Accounting
and Taxation News Sites ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/AccountingNews.htm
Fraud News
---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/AccountingNews.htm
XBRL News ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/AccountingNews.htm
Selected Accounting History Sites ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/AccountingNews.htm
Some of Bob Jensen's Pictures and Stories ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/AccountingNews.htm
Free Tutorials, Videos, and Other Helpers ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/AccountingNews.htm
Bob Jensen's gateway to millions of
other blogs and social/professional networks ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/ListservRoles.htm
Bob Jensen's Threads ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/threads.htm
Bob Jensen's Blogs ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/JensenBlogs.htm
Current and past editions of my newsletter called New
Bookmarks ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookurl.htm
Current and past editions of my newsletter called
Tidbits ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/TidbitsDirectory.htm
Current and past editions of my newsletter called Fraud
Updates ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
Bob Jensen's past presentations and lectures ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/resume.htm#Presentations
Free Online Textbooks, Videos, and Tutorials ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/ElectronicLiterature.htm#Textbooks
Free Tutorials in Various Disciplines ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Bookbob2.htm#Tutorials
Edutainment and Learning Games ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/thetools.htm#Edutainment
Open Sharing Courses ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/updateee.htm#OKI
Peter, Paul, and
Barney: An Essay on 2008 U.S. Government Bailouts of Private Companies ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/2008Bailout.htm
Health Care News ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Health.htm
Bob Jensen's Resume ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Resume.htm
Bob Jensen's Threads ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/threads.htm
Bob Jensen's Homepage ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/
Accounting Theory Courses
Accounting theory courses seem to vary across the board
as do AIS courses in comparison to most other accounting courses that are
structured largely by the CPA examination and relatively uniform textbooks in
basic, intermediate, and advanced accounting courses.
Some programs gave up teaching accounting theory, in
part because there really aren't any good new textbooks in accounting theory,
and the older textbooks are outdated.
There are many bases from which accounting theory might
be taught;
Suggestions below are broad categories having considerable overlap:
·
Historical Base ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#AccountingHistory
Modern Science and Ancient Wisdom ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#AncientWisdom
"A Wisdom 101 Course!" February 15, 2010 ---
http://www.simoleonsense.com/a-wisdom-101-course/
"Overview of Prior Research on Wisdom," Simoleon Sense,
February 15, 2010 ---
http://www.simoleonsense.com/overview-of-prior-research-on-wisdom/
"An Overview Of The Psychology Of Wisdom," Simoleon Sense,
February 15, 2010 ---
http://www.simoleonsense.com/an-overview-of-the-psychology-of-wisdom/
·
Opposing Theories of Accounting Hall of Fame Theorists (not all
were theorists) ---
http://fisher.osu.edu/departments/accounting-and-mis/the-accounting-hall-of-fame/membership-in-hall/
·
Creative Accounting Base ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#Manipulation
And ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#OBSF2
One course I would like to develop would relate the
great theories of management and sociology to roles accounting might play
under such theories:
I would also like to develop an accounting theory course
on the interaction of accounting controls, stewardship accounting, and the
evolution of fraud. The focus would be upon theory of preventing fraud:
Added Later
Another topic I overlooked for a theory course would be focus on accounting for
the “shadow economy” ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#ShadowEconomy
And any accounting theory
course should not overlook the huge problem of accounting for intangibles and
contingencies ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#TheoryDisputes
These are at the very center of the systemic and intractable problems of
financial and managerial accounting.
James Martin's references on accounting
theory courses ---
http://maaw.blogspot.com/2010/03/my-response-to-question-about.html
Comparisons
of IFRS with Domestic Standards of Many Nations
http://www.iasplus.com/country/compare.htm
More Detailed
Differences
(Comparisons) between FASB and IASB Accounting Standards
2011 Update
"IFRS and US GAAP: Similarities and Differences" according to PwC
(2011 Edition)
http://www.pwc.com/us/en/issues/ifrs-reporting/publications/ifrs-and-us-gaap-similarities-and-differences.jhtml
Note the Download button!
Note that warnings are given throughout the document that the similarities and
differences mentioned in the booklet are not comprehensive of all similarities
and differences. The document is, however, a valuable addition to students of
FASB versus IASB standard differences and similarities.
It's not easy keeping track of what's changing and
how, but this publication can help. Changes for 2011 include:
- Revised introduction reflecting the current
status, likely next steps, and what companies should be doing now
(see page 2);
- Updated convergence timeline, including
current proposed timing of exposure drafts, deliberations, comment
periods, and final standards
(see page 7);
- More current analysis of the differences
between IFRS and US GAAP -- including an assessment of the impact
embodied within the differences
(starting on page 17); and
- Details incorporating authoritative standards
and interpretive guidance issued through July 31, 2011
(throughout).
This continues to be one of PwC's most-read
publications, and we are confident the 2011 edition will further your
understanding of these issues and potential next steps.
For further exploration of the similarities and
differences between IFRS and US GAAP, please also visit our
IFRS Video Learning Center.
To request a hard copy of this publication, please contact your PwC
engagement team or
contact us.
Jensen Comment
My favorite comparison topics (Derivatives and Hedging) begin on Page 158
The booklet does a good job listing differences but, in my opinion, overly
downplays the importance of these differences. It may well be that IFRS is more
restrictive in some areas and less restrictive in other areas to a fault. This
is one topical area where IFRS becomes much too subjective such that comparisons
of derivatives and hedging activities under IFRS can defeat the main purpose of
"standards." The main purpose of an "accounting standard" is to lead to greater
comparability of inter-company financial statements. Boo on IFRS in this topical
area, especially when it comes to testing hedge effectiveness!
One key quotation is on Page 165
IFRS does not specifically discuss the methodology
of applying a critical-terms match in the level of detail included within
U.S. GAAP.
Then it goes yatta, yatta, yatta.
Jensen Comment
This is so typical of when IFRS fails to present the "same level of detail" and
more importantly fails to provide "implementation guidance" comparable with the
FASB's DIG implementation topics and illustrations.
I have a
huge beef with the lack of illustrations in IFRS versus the many illustrations
in U.S. GAAP.
I have a
huge beef with the lack of illustrations in IFRS versus the many illustrations
in U.S. GAAP.
I have a huge beef with the lack of illustrations in
IFRS versus the many illustrations in U.S. GAAP.
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting standards setting controversies ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#MethodsForSetting
"Canadian regulator decides against allowing early adoption of recent IFRSs
by certain entities," IAS Plus, November 1, 2011 ---
http://www.iasplus.com/index.htm
. . .
In making its decision, the OSFI considered a
number of factors such as industry
consistency, OSFI policy positions on
accounting and capital, operational capacity and resource constraints of
Federally Regulated Entities (FREs), the ability to benefit from improved
standards arising from the financial crisis and the
notion of a level playing field with other Canadian
and international financial institutions.
OSFI concluded that FREs should not early adopt the following new or amended
IFRSs, but instead should adhere to their mandatory effective dates:
Continued
Jensen Comment
The clients, auditors, and the AICPA clamoring that U.S. firms should be able to
voluntarily choose IFRS instead of U.S. GAAP even before it has not been decided
that IFRS will ever replace FASB standards seem to ignore the problems that
voluntary choice of IFRS might cause for investors and analysts. The above
reasoning by the OSFI makes sense to me.
But then outfits like the AICPA have a self-serving interest in earning
millions of dollars selling IFRS training courses and materials.
November 2, 2011 reply from Patricia Walters
Does that mean you oppose options to early adopt standards in general,
not just IFRSs?
Pat
November 2, 2011 reply from Bob Jensen
Hi Pat,
It's hard to say regarding early adoption of a particular national or
international standard, because there can be unique circumstances. For
example, FAS 123R simply altered how to make disclosures rather than alter
the disclosures themselves since employee option expenses had to be
disclosed before the FAS 123R adoption date. But even here early adoption of
FAS 123R by Company A versus late adoption by Company B made simple
comparisons of eps and P/E ratios between these companies less easy.
There's a huge difference between early adoption of a particular standard
and early adoption of an entire system of standards like switching from FASB
accounting standards to IFRS.
I think the Canadian position of early adoption of IFRS is probably correct
because of the mess early adoption of IFRS makes with comparisons of
companies using different accounting standards and the added costs of
regulation of more than one set of standards. Also think of the added burden
placed upon the courts to adjudicate disputes when differing sets of
standards are being used.
Even though we allow IFRS for SEC registered foreign companies, I think it
would be a total mess for the SEC, the PCAOB, investors, analysts,
educators, trainers, auditing, and even the IRS (where tax and reporting
treatments must sometimes be reconciled) if our domestic corporations could
choose between FASB versus IASB standards.
There are hundreds of differences between FASB and IASB standards. Allowing
companies domestic companies to cherry pick which system they choose before
it is even known if there will ever be official replacement of FASB
standards by IASB standards would be very, very confusing. What if there
never is a decision to replace FASB standards? Do want to simply allow
companies to choose to bypass FASB standards at their own discretion?
Of course, if information were costless it might be ideal to require
financial reporting where FASB and IASB outcomes are reconciled. But clients
and auditors generally contend that the cost of doing this greatly exceeds
benefits. And teaching financial accounting would become exceedingly
complicated if we had to teach two sets of standards on an equal basis.
I would certainly hate to face a CPA examination that had nearly equal
coverage of both FASB and IASB standards simultaneously. I say this
especially after viewing the hundreds of pages of complicated differences
between the two standards systems.
Respectfully,
Bob Jensen
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting standard setting controversies ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#MethodsForSetting
"Empirics and Psychology: Eight of the World’s Top Young Economists Discuss
Where Their Field Is Going," There Are Free Lunches Blog, October 8, 2012
---
http://therearefreelunches.blogspot.com/2012/10/o2-3-empirics-and-psychology-eight-of.html
Link to the Big Think Interviews ---
Click Here
http://bigthink.com/power-games/empirics-and-psychology-eight-of-the-worlds-top-young-economists-discuss-where-their-field-is-going?goback=.gde_112700_member_141501666
Jensen Comment
Note that tied into Peter Leeson's comments is an entire excellent online course
by Steve Keen
I’ve just uploaded the first 8 lectures in my Behavioral Finance class
for 2012. The first few lectures are very similar to last year’s, but the
content changes substantially by about lecture 5 when I start to focus more
on Schumpeter’s approach to endogenous money ---
http://www.debtdeflation.com/blogs/2012/09/23/behavioral-finance-lectures/
Related book: Debunking
Economics
Jensen Comment
These are quite good slide show lectures.
Bob Jensen's Threads on Behavioral and Cultural Economics and Finance ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#Behavioral
Bob Jensen's threads on tutorials, lectures, videos and course materials
from prestigious universities ---
http://www.debtdeflation.com/blogs/2012/09/23/behavioral-finance-lectures/
Bob Jensen's threads on tutorials, lectures, videos and course materials
from prestigious universities ---
http://www.debtdeflation.com/blogs/2012/09/23/behavioral-finance-lectures/
"History, Not Politics,"
by Serena Golden, Inside Higher Ed, May 21,
2010 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2010/05/21/spence
Jonathan Spence came here
to deliver a speech, but don't let that fool you: his address -- the 39th
Annual Jefferson Lecture in the Humanities, which took place Thursday -- in
no way resembled the sort typically associated with D.C.
The Jefferson Lecture is
sponsored by the National Endowment for the Humanities, which describes the
lecture as "the most prestigious honor the federal government bestows for
distinguished intellectual achievement in the humanities." Those
chosen
for the distinction are typically academics or
creative types (or both) -- but, given the setting, the sponsor, and the
nature of the award (which "recognizes an individual... who has the ability
to communicate the knowledge and wisdom of the humanities in a broad,
appealing way"), Jefferson Lecturers have historically taken the opportunity
to make a larger (and sometimes tacitly political) point related to the
humanities. Last year, controversial bioethicist
Leon Kass used his lecture
to criticize the way the humanities are taught and researched at American
universities; in 2007,
Harvey Mansfield argued, with many subtle
political allusions, that the social sciences are in dire need of "the help
of literature and history";
Tom Wolfe's 2006 lecture discussed how the
humanities shed light on modern culture (and lamented the current state of
that culture on campuses); 2005 lecturer Donald Kagan and 2004 lecturer
Helen Vendler offered opposing views on which disciplines of the humanities
are most crucial, and why.
If any of those in the
crowd (noticeably larger than last year's) at the Warner Theater last night
were familiar with the Jefferson Lectures of years prior, they were in for a
surprise.
Spence is Sterling
Professor of History Emeritus at Yale University, whose faculty he joined in
1966. His specialty has always been China -- his 14 books on Chinese history
include 1990's The Search for Modern China, upon whose publication
the New York Times
accurately predicted that it would "undoubtedly
become a standard text on the subject" -- and his lecture was entitled
"When
Minds Met: China and the West in the Seventeenth Century."
Even this relatively specific appellation, however,
conveys a misleading breadth, for Spence's lecture focused almost
exclusively on three men -- Shen Fuzong, an exceptionally learned Chinese
traveler; Thomas Hyde, an English scholar of history and language; and
Robert Boyle, also English, a scientist and philosopher of considerable
renown -- and one year: 1687.
In his lecture, Spence gave
what may (or may not) have been one brief acknowledgment that he'd chosen an
unusually narrow topic of discourse: "It is a commonplace, I think, that the
sources that underpin our concept of the humanities, as a focus for our
thinking, are expected to be broadly inclusive." But, for himself, Spence
dismissed that notion in one more sentence: "...as a historian I have always
been drawn to the apparently small-scale happenings in circumscribed
settings, out of which we can tease a more expansive story."
Thus he dedicated the rest
of his lecture to the story of those three historical figures in the year
1687. Shen had traveled to Europe in the company of one of his teachers, a
Flemish Jesuit priest who was co-editing a book of the sayings of Confucius
from Chinese into Latin. Hyde, librarian at the University of Oxford's
Bodleian Library, invited Shen there to assist him with the cataloging of
some Chinese books -- and also because Hyde, who in that era would have been
called an Orientalist, wanted to learn Chinese himself. After a brief stay
at Oxford, Shen returned to London, bearing a letter of introduction from
Hyde to his friend Boyle; the letter recommended that Boyle meet and
converse with the Chinese scholar. The letter had to be convincing, Spence
explained, because Boyle's reputation was by then widespread, and "he was so
inundated with curious visitors that at times he had to withdraw into
self-enforced seclusion...."
Shen did meet Boyle at
least once; Boyle's work diary mentions their discussion of the Chinese
language and its scholars (a conversation that, like all of those between
Shen and Hyde, must have taken place in Latin: Shen's Latin was excellent,
but he did not, evidently, know English). And Hyde maintained correspondence
not only with his old friend Boyle -- over the years, the two had "discussed
Arabic and Persian texts, Malay grammars... and how to access books from
Tangier, Constantinople and Bombay" as well as "the chemical constituents of
sal ammoniac and amber, the effectiveness of certain Mexican herbs...
current studies of human blood and air, the nature of papyrus, the writings
of Ramon Llull and the use of elixirs and alchemy in the treatment of
illnesses" -- but also with Shen, until around the time of the latter's
departure from England for Portugal in the spring of 1688.The letters
between Shen and Hyde covered such topics as "Chinese vocabulary... China's
units of weights and measurements... the workings of the Chinese examination
system and bureaucracy... [and] the Chinese Buddhist belief in the
transmigration of souls."
"All three men," Spence
ultimately concluded, "though so different, shared certain basic ideas about
human knowledge: these included... the importance of linguistic precision,
the need for broad-based comparative studies, the role of clarity in
argument, the need for thorough scrutiny of philosophical and theological
principles.... Theirs, though brief, had been a real meeting of the minds.
And the values they shared remain, well over three hundred years later, the
kind that we can seek to practice even in our own hurried lives."
That final point was the
closest Spence came to suggesting a particular take-home message for his
audience; however, in an interview with Inside Higher Ed, held that
morning in the lobby of the Willard Hotel, he did mention a few ideas that
he was hoping to convey. For one thing, Spence said, given the current
importance of U.S.-China relations, he hopes this much older, smaller-scale
example of dialogue between the East and West will "give some perspective to
that."
"Historians," he said,
"try to get people away from just focusing on the present; they try to give
them some sort of stronger sense of continuity, human continuity. And I just
like the range of things, these three people that draw together, and they're
writing their letters to each other, and their few meetings... and in that
short time they talk about examination systems, they talk about language,
competition, they talk about medicine, they talk about -- I was fascinated,
they talk about chess..... All these things seemed to me to flow together,
and I think they'd make an interesting -- I hope they'd make an interesting
-- package about cultural contact."
There's a message in that,
Spence said: "to make our range of contact as wide as possible, and to use
our intelligence about how to do this."
Another issue raised in
the lecture, Spence said -- "maybe a small point, but perhaps worth making"
-- has to do with the teaching and learning of languages; Hyde dreamed of
bringing native speakers of various Eastern languages to Oxford, to
establish a college of languages. "Why should everybody else on the planet
speak English?" Spence asked. "I mean, why should they?"
But on the larger
importance of the humanities, and their current status in higher education
and society at large, Spence was reluctant to make a strong argument. "It's
not just a case of encouraging humanities in the abstract; it's having
something to say.... The main search should be for what is the most
meaningful thing you can achieve with the humanities, how can you share some
kind of broader cultural values, or how can you learn things about yourself
or other societies. The challenge is to use the humane intelligence and see
what can be built on that."
And when it comes to
funding, "any government has to put its priorities somewhere, and this does
usually mean cutting something."
His lecture, Spence said,
isn't "meant to be exactly a political speech, you know, I hope people
understand that."
For the most part, those
in attendance seemed more than satisfied. Spence's talk was punctuated
frequently by warm laughter from the audience -- whom he indulged
shamelessly, often departing from his prepared remarks to expound upon
details that interested him, or to make additional jokes whenever the crowd
found one of his remarks especially humorous. When he finished, the applause
was long and loud, and one woman remarked audibly, "That was amazing!"; her
companion replied, "Nice, really nice!"
But at least a few people
reacted with more ambivalence. One group of young attendees, who identified
themselves as fans of Spence, having been students of his as undergraduates
at Yale, said that while they'd enjoyed the lecture, they had been hoping
that Spence would make a more explicit connection between his topic and
issues of current cultural or political relevance. One noted that, in his
introductory remarks that evening, NEH Chairman James Leach had described
the purpose of the Jefferson Lecture as being "to narrow the gap between the
world of academia and public affairs," and had emphasized the Endowment's
goal of "bridging cultures."
There was an "irony," this
young man said, in the fact that Spence's lecture precisely addressed the
bridging of two cultures, but Spence hadn't made a bridge between his own
remarks -- which the audience member interpreted as "a clarion call for
better scholarship" -- and any other realm. "Listeners," he said (possibly
referring to himself), "want something that's cut and dry, that's tweetable."
The possibility of such
complaints about his speech had arisen during Inside Higher Ed's
interview with Spence that morning; he hadn't seemed concerned. "I'm not
going to sort of over-apologize to the audience... they've chosen to come to
hear about the seventeenth century" -- he chuckled -- "I think we announced
that!"
Bob Jensen’s call for better research in the accounting academy ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/TheoryTAR.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting history are at
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2010/05/21/spence
Robert Walker in New Zealand
and I have been corresponding about how much of the core of an accounting theory
course should be devoted to the main works of Professor Ijiri, especially his
AAA Monographs ---
http://aaahq.org/market/display.cfm?catID=5
Professor Ijiri was one on my
doctoral studies professors, and I greatly admire his research and scholarship
and devotion to mathematics ---
http://fisher.osu.edu/departments/accounting-and-mis/the-accounting-hall-of-fame/membership-in-hall/yuji-ijiri/
However, given the tradeoffs
of the many topics that are important to accounting theory education, I think I
would devote less time to Yuji’s works than would Robert Walker since I don’t
think Yuji addressed many of our current theoretical problems. Robert Walker
would pretty much begin and end an accounting theory course with the Ijiri
monographs.
Robert Walker is a fine
accounting historian and theorist who asked me to share the following with you.
I admit that my own interest
in theory are probably wider. I’m also inclined with respect to accounting
theory to also focus on issues of operations and implementation. We can always
assume non-existent worlds filled with idealized inhabitants that we program.
Andy way we like But that’s probably theory best left to economists.
Robert
E. (Bob) Jensen
Trinity University Accounting Professor (Emeritus)
190 Sunset Hill Road
Sugar Hill, NH 03586
www.trinity.edu/rjensen
From: Robert
Bruce Walker [mailto:walkerrb@actrix.co.nz]
Sent: Wednesday, March 31, 2010 9:42 PM
To: Jensen, Robert
Subject: RE: Accounting Theory Courses
I am not trying to
operationalise ‘triple entry’ bookkeeping. This is ijiri’s ‘bridge too far’
(even a genius, for that is what he is, can be mistaken). Knowing the flaws
of historical cost, he attempted to introduce a third element which
accommodated the future (‘momentum’). In doing so he violated the beauty of
the algebraic formulation that double entry is
I have attempted to
express ‘momentum’ in double entry form – that is, I don’t look to the AAA
study on ‘triple entry bookkeeping’ (which, frankly, is nonsense and an
abject failure) but to the alternative valuation analysis in Theory of
Accounting Measurement. The idea of ‘momentum’ is to try to predict the
future from the past. That is not possible because it pre-supposes that
there is an essential continuity. It cannot take account of what is now
referred to as the ‘black swan’ phenomenon – the wholly unpredictable and
unexpected event. At best the accountant can only lay out the value
propositions that are an attempt to predict the future and adjust them for
discontinuities. The arrival of the black swan is, hopefully, not so
momentous an event as to over-whelm the entity whose accounting is being
carried out. The equity buffer is there for that purpose – to accommodate
the unexpected.
For instance, even in the
example of life insurance where actuarial practice is (a) most precise and
(b) most certain (everybody dies) the actuary cannot take account of events
that have not arisen before. They cannot predict a plague which would
fundamentally alter the stochastic data. All they can do is introduce a
prudential margin (see IAS36.30). Even then it may not be enough and even
then a dangerous thing to do as it under-states equity.
I would go so far as to
say that concepts such as irrationality are not amenable to any real or
sensible mathematical formulation. If it cannot be expressed in that form
it cannot be expressed in accounting notation. It is therefore not the
business of accounting. Perhaps my theory of accounting, if it is a theory
at all, ultimately teaches this – accounting needs to be much more modest in
its ambition. It deals only in money and money’s worth. If it cannot, it
is not practical to express it in money then it shouldn’t be expressed.
Take your concern with
contingent liability (or better provisional liability) it is simply absurd
to predict the outcome of the judicial process when dealing in matters of
tort (as you know these days that is how I make my living and I wouldn’t
even attempt to quantify my future ‘winnings’). A written narrative is all
that you can hope to achieve in such matters. If that understates
liabilities, so be it. As I say that is what equity (ownership interest) is
for.
It might not surprise for
me to claim that my theories are based in Friedrich Nietzsche. Consider
this:
I walk among men as among fragments of the
future; of that future which I scan.
And it is all my
art and aim, to compose into one and bring together that which is fragment, and
riddle and dreadful chance.
For how could I
endure to be a man; if man were not poet and reader of riddles and the redeemer
of chance!
To redeem the
past; to turn every ‘it was’ into ‘I wanted it thus’. That alone would I call
redemption.
Friedrich
Nietzsche Thus Spoke Zarathustra.
You wish to read the
‘fragments of the future’. A Promethean task I think. You cannot ever deal
with ‘dreadful chance’ until it is upon you. Then all you can do is redeem
it. It is foolhardy even an act of hubris to think otherwise. Accounting
can never do what you want it to do. In the end it is about limits, limits
to ambition.
Robert (jensen)
PS I hope your wife is
OK. It is illness, on a human scale, that is ‘dreadful chance’.
PSS Your colleagues might
consider, along with Ijiri, Nietzsche as the foundation to a course of
theory. His book Beyond Good and Evil has a sub-title ‘Towards a Philosophy
of the Future’.
From: Jensen, Robert [mailto:rjensen@trinity.edu]
Sent: Thursday, 1 April 2010 10:26 a.m.
To: Robert Bruce Walker
Subject: RE: Accounting Theory Courses
Hi Robert (Walker),
I think I understand the
swap, but I cannot connect to Ijiri with this illustration. The revaluations
are given, but they do not relate to force or momentum. That would take a
mathematical model of the future valuations, but this cannot be predicted.
If it could there would be no swap. The party and the counterparty have
different predictions of the future
New Essay Site by Robert Bruce Walker, Practitioner in New Zealand ---
walkerrb@actrix.co.nz
I have begun to go back over all my many writings
on the matter of accounting. I have decided to start publishing this
material on my website and I will do so progressively over the next few
weeks and months.
The first offering is an essay I wrote as a
submission to what is now NZICA on the occasion of a restructure in about
1992.
For those of you who have read my messages over the
last decade or so you will see that I am a musician with a single score in
my repertoire. Or less self deprecatingly I have had a consistent message
for what is now becoming decades rather than years.
Was I listened to back then? I doubt it. Was I
right in what I said? My answer to that may surprise.
Please read it and circulate it. I am slightly
uneasy about pushing people to read what I write. It seems so egotistical.
But then that would be true of all writers or would-be writers.
http://www.robertbwalker.co.nz/documents/archives
Yuji Ijiri's Triple Entry Accounting Resurfaces Without the
Equations ---
https://www.finextra.com/blogposting/18183/accounting-auditing-and-blockchain-the-common-thread-that-binds-the-3-is-triple-entry-accounting
Momentum accounting and triple-entry bookkeeping ---
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Momentum_accounting_and_triple-entry_bookkeeping
Jensen Comment
In Ijiri's mathematics the momentum lies in the first derivative. In accounting
practice the first derivative is not easily measured and audited. The momentum
for momentum accounting dies for lack of real world applications.
PS Yuji was one of my Ph.D. studies advisors
His writings on triple-entry accounting are listed in the above link.
Yuji is one of the best-known defenders of historical cost accounting.
Brush up your Shakespeare:
Medieval manuscripts to hit Internet
Stanford University
Libraries, the University of Cambridge and
Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, will make
hundreds of medieval manuscripts, dating
from the sixth through the 16th centuries,
accessible on the Internet.
"Medieval manuscripts to hit Internet,"
Stanford Report, July 13, 2005 ---
http://news-service.stanford.edu/news/2005/july13/parker-071305.html
A summary of the medieval times and
literature is available at
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medieval
May 28, 2005 reply from Barbara Scofield
[scofield@GSM.UDALLAS.EDU]
Thank you for the notice about the availability of
the medieval manuscripts on the Internet through the project Parker on the
Web at Stanford University. Two manuscripts are currently available, and on
page 11 of the English translation of Matthew Paris's "English History From
1235 to 1273" I have already found references to accounting (see below).
Accountants are still using the principle "under
whatever name it may be called" and entities are still making up new names
for inconvenient economic events in the hopes of avoiding full disclosure.
At this Catholic liberal arts university
Shakespeare is modern, and the medieval world is revered, so I'm interested
in gaining some insight into the medieval worldview.
Barbara W. Scofield, PhD, CPA
Associate Professor of Accounting
University of Dallas
1845 E. Northgate Irving, TX 75062
Braniff 262
scofield@gsm.udallas.edu
Here’s an expanded view of questions raised about
which constituencies credit rating agencies (and by analogy auditing firms)
really serve.
A
message forwarded by my anonymous friend Larry on October 18, 2009
How Moody's sold its ratings -- and sold out investors | McClatchy
---
http://www.mcclatchydc.com/politics/story/77244.html
Instead, Moody's promoted executives who
headed its "structured finance" division, which assisted Wall Street in
packaging loans into securities for sale to investors. It also stacked
its compliance department with the people who awarded the highest
ratings to pools of mortgages that soon were downgraded to junk. Such
products have another name now: "toxic assets."
"In 2001, Moody's had revenues of $800.7 million; in 2005, they were
up to $1.73 billion; and in 2006, $2.037 billion. The exploding profits
were fees from packaging . . . and for granting the top-class AAA
ratings, which were supposed to mean they were as safe as U.S.
government securities," said Lawrence McDonald in his recent book, "A
Colossal Failure of Common Sense."
Nobody cared about due diligence so long as
the money kept pouring in during the housing boom. Moody's stock peaked
in February 2007 at more than $72 a share.
Billionaire investor Warren Buffett's
firm Berkshire Hathaway owned 15 percent of
Moody's stock by the end of 2001, company reports show. That stake,
largely still intact, meant that the Oracle from Omaha reaped huge
financial rewards while Moody's overlooked the glaring problems in pools
of subprime mortgages.
A Berkshire spokeswoman had no comment.
Moody's wasn't alone in ignoring the mounting problems. It wasn't
even first among competitors. The financial industry newsletter
Asset-Backed Alert found that Standard & Poor's participated in 1,962
deals in 2006 involving pools of loans, while Moody's did 1,697. In
2005, Standard & Poor's did 1,754 deals to Moody's 1,120. Fitch was well
behind both.
http://www.mcclatchydc.com/politics/story/77244.html
Jensen Comment
I’m frantically searching the writings of my very technical hero, Janet
Tavakoli, to discover that all this is not true about my other hero, Warren
Buffett. Of course there are huge unknowns, at this point in time, and
varying degrees of culpability.
Janet is pretty rough on the ratings agencies in her
writings. However, she’s always kind to Warren. One of my all-time favorite
books is her Dear Mr. Buffet book. On Page 107, Janet writes as
follows:
At the end of 2007, Berkshire Hathaway owned 78 million shares of Moody’s
Corporation, one of the top three rating agencies (the same shares owned
when I first met Warren Buffett in 2005), representing just over 19 percent
of the capital stock. The cot basis of the shares is $499 million. At the
end of 200, the value was just under $1 billion. By the end of 2006, the
value was around $3.3 billion, but it dropped to $1.7 billion at the end of
2007. The sharp increase in revenues is due chiefly to revenues generated
from rating structured financial products, and the sharp decrease was due to
the disillusionment of the market with the integrity of the ratings.
On Page 109, Janet continues to berate the rating
agency cartel (where I think it might be possible to substitute auditors for
rating agencies interchangeably):
The rating agencies seem to not care about the market’s forgiveness
since not only have they not apologized --- a necessary but not sufficient
condition --- they seem to feel the market should change.
Specifically, the market should change its point of view about what it
expects from the rating agencies. Yet it seems that the market has the right
to expect rating agencies to follow the basic principles of statistics.
The tactic has mainly been successful because the rating agencies act as a
cartel, leveraging their joint power to have fees magically converge and
have ratings so similar that they have participated overrating AAA
structured products backed by dodgy loans in 2007 that took substantial
principal losses. Meanwhile, many market professionals, including me,
pointed out in print that the AAA ratings were maeaningless. The rating
agencies presented a farily united front in defending their methods (except
for Fitch, which also participated on overrated CDOs and later seemed more
responsive to downgrading structured products.
. . .
“Ma and pa” retail investors found that AAA product ended up in their
pension funds and mutual funds because their money managers gave too much
credence to an AAA rating.
But nowhere have I yet found where Janet alludes to any
insider profiteering on the part of Warren Buffett who also lost billions of
dollars in the crash The difference between “ma and pa” and Mr. Buffet is
that a billion dollars is pocket change to Warren Buffet. He can easily
recoup his losses legitimately in trades with stupid hedge fund managers and
bankers that rely too much on fallible models (at least that’s what
mathematician Janet Tavakoli tells us in a very enlightening way).
Expert Financial Predictions (Jon Stewart's hindsight video
scrapbook) ---
http://www.technologyreview.com/blog/post.aspx?bid=354&bpid=23077&nlid=1840
You have to watch the first third of this video before it gets into the
scrapbook itself
The problem unmentioned here is one faced by auditors and credit rating agencies
of risky clients every day: Predictions are often self fulfilling
If an auditor issues going concern exceptions in audit reports, the exceptions
themselves will probably contribute to the downfall of the clients
The same can be said by financial analysts who elect to trash a company's
financial outlook
Hence we have the age-old conflict between holding back on what you really
secretly predict versus pulling the fire alarm on a troubled company
There are no easy answers here except to conclude that it auditors and
credit rating agencies appeared to not reveal many of their inner secret
predictions in 2008
Auditing firms and credit rating agencies lost a lot of credibility in this
economic crisis, but they've survived many such stains on their reputations in
the past
By now we're used to the fact that the public is generally aware of the fire
before the auditors and credit rating agencies pull the alarm lever
On the other hand, financial wizards who pull the alarm lever on nearly every
company all the time lose their credibility in a hurry
Video: Warren Buffett's
Secrets To Success ---
http://www.businessinsider.com/business-news/nov-24-alice1-2009-11 '
Bob Jensen's
threads on credit rating agencies are at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#CreditRatingAgencies
Bob Jensen's threads on
auditor professionalism are at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#Professionalism
FASB Codification Database Supersedes All FASB Standards
Countdown to Codification Alert: FASB Alert #4, 5-22-09
What happens to U.S. GAAP literature when the Codification went live on July 1,
2009?
All
existing standards that were used to create the Codification will become
superseded upon the adoption of the Codification. The FASB will no longer
update and maintain the superseded standards. Also, upon adoption of the
Codification, the U.S. GAAP hierarchy will flatten from five levels to
twoauthoritative and non-authoritative. The following table illustrates the
result:

DON’T BE CAUGHT OFF GUARD! GET READY FOR THE CODIFICATION!
The FASB instituted a major change in the way accounting standards
are organized. The FASB Accounting Standards CodificationTM is
expected to become the single official source of authoritative, nongovernmental
U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP). After final
approval by the FASB only one level of authoritative GAAP will exist, other than
guidance issued by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). All other
literature will be non-authoritative.
While the FASB Codification is designed to make it much easier to research
accounting issues, the transition to use of the Codification will require some
advance training. These weekly “Countdown to Codification” alerts are designed
to provide tips to make that transition easier.
The FASB offers a free online tutorial at
http://asc.fasb.org. A recorded instructional webcastThe Move to
Codification of US GAAP, first presented live on March 13, 2008also is
available at
http://www.fasb.org/fasb_webcast_series/index.shtml. In addition,
Codification training opportunities are offered through professional accounting
organizations such as the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA).
For the PwC Codification Guide
I snipped the URL to
http://snipurl.com/ifrs-litevsheavy
The original link is at
http://www.pwc.com/en_GX/gx/ifrs-reporting/pdf/Sims_diffs_IFRS_SMEs.pdf
Deloitte’s Codification
helpers are linked at
http://www.iasplus.com/usa/fasb/0906codification.pdf
ASC = Accounting Standard Codification of the FASB
January 8, 2013 message from Zane Swanson
Another
faculty person created a video (link follows)
http://www.screencast.com/t/K8gruSHTv
which
introduces the ASC. This video has potential value at the beginning of the
semester to acquaint students with the ASC. I am thinking about posting the
clip to AAA commons. But, where should it be posted and does this type of
thing get posted in multiple interest group areas?
Any thoughts /
suggestions?
Zane Swanson
www.askaref.com
a handheld device source of ASC information
Jensen Comment
A disappointment for colleges and students is that access to the Codification
database is not free. The FASB does offer deeply discounted prices to colleges
but not to individual teachers or students.
There are other access routes that are not free such as the PwC Comperio (now
called Inform) ---
http://www.pwc.com/gx/en/comperio/index.jhtml
Hi Zane,
This is a great video helper for learning how
to use the FASB.s Codification database.
An enormous disappointment to me is how the
Codification omits many, many illustrations in the
pre-codification pronouncements that are still available
electronically as PDF files. In particular, the best way to
learn a very complicated standard like FAS 133 is to study the
illustrations in the original FAS 133, FAS 138, etc.
The FASB paid a fortune for experts to develop the
illustrations in the pre-codification pronouncements. It's sad that
those investments are wasted in the Codification database.
What is even worse is that accounting teachers are
forgetting to go to the pre-codification pronouncements for wonderful
illustrations to use in class and illustrations for CPA exam preparation
---
http://www.fasb.org/jsp/FASB/Page/PreCodSectionPage&cid=1218220137031
Sadly the FASB no longer seems to invest as much in
illustrations for new pronouncements in the Codification database.
Bob Jensen
Examples of great FAS 133 pre-codification illustrations are as follows:
133ex01a.xls 12-Jun-2008 03:50 345K
133ex02.doc 17-Feb-2004 06:00 2.1M
133ex02a.xls 12-Jun-2008 03:48 279K
133ex03a.xls 04-Apr-2001 06:45 92K
133ex04a.xls 12-Jun-2008 03:50 345K
133ex05.htm 04-Apr-2001 06:45 371K
133ex05a.xls 12-Jun-2008 03:49 1.5M
133ex05aSupplement.htm 26-Mar-2005 13:59 57K
133ex05aSupplement.xls 26-Mar-2005 13:50 32K
133ex05d.htm 26-Mar-2005 13:59 56K
133ex06a.xls 29-Sep-2001 11:43 123K
133ex07a.xls 08-Mar-2004 16:26 1.2M
133ex08a.xls 29-Sep-2001 11:43 216K
133ex09a.xls 12-Jun-2008 03:49 99K
133ex10.doc 17-Feb-2004 16:37 80K
133ex10a.xls
133summ.htm 13-Feb-2004 10:50 121K
138EXAMPLES.htm 30-Apr-2004 08:39 355K
138bench.htm 07-Dec-2007 05:37 139K
138ex01a.xls 09-Mar-2001 13:20 1.7M
138exh01.htm 09-Mar-2001 13:20 31K
138exh02.htm 09-Mar-2001 13:20 65K
138exh03.htm 09-Mar-2001 13:20 42K
138exh04.htm 09-Mar-2001 13:20 108K
138exh04a.htm 09-Mar-2001 13:20 8.2K
138intro.doc 09-Mar-2001 13:20 95K
138intro.htm 09-M
Others ---
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/
The following message was
forwarded by David Albrecht on June 16, 2009
From: "Tracey E. Sutherland" <traceysutherland@aaahq.org>
Organization: American Accounting Association
Date: Tue, 16 Jun 2009 17:25:23 -0400
FAF and AAA to Provide FASB Codification to Faculty and Students
On July 1, 2009, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) is
instituting a major change in the way accounting standards are organized. On
that date, the FASB Accounting Standards Codification™ (FASB Codification)
will become the single official source of authoritative, nongovernmental
U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (U.S. GAAP). After that date,
only one level of authoritative U.S. GAAP will exist, other than guidance
issued by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). All other
literature will be non-authoritative.
As part of its educational mission, the Financial Accounting Foundation (FAF),
the oversight and administrative body of the FASB, in a joint initiative
with the American Accounting Association (AAA), will provide faculty and
students in accounting programs at post-secondary academic institutions with
the Professional View of the online FASB Codification.
Accounting Program Access—No Cost to Individual Faculty or Students
The Professional View of the FASB Codification will be accessible at no cost
to individual faculty and students, through the AAA’s Academic Access
program, available to Registered Accounting Programs. The Professional View
will provide advanced search functions with special utilities to assist in
the navigation of content, representing the fully functional view of the
FASB Codification that will be used by auditors, financial analysts,
investors, and preparers of financial statements. All of the features that
have been available with the verification version currently at
http://asc.fasb.org are included with the Professional View.
AAA Academic Access
The AAA will provide direct services to accounting departments through its
Academic Access program; issuing authentication credentials for faculty and
students through Registered Accounting Programs, at a low annual
institutional fee of $150. Information about this program will be
forthcoming directly from AAA and on the AAA website at
http://aaahq.org/FASB/Access.cfm.
Transitional Access—From July 1 through August 31, 2009
The AAA will provide credentials to individual faculty and students, at no
charge, during the transition period before the beginning of the fall
semester when faculty and students will receive credentials for access
through their Registered Accounting Programs.
The FAF, FASB, and AAA are enthusiastic about this new initiative and
understand the value of this program to accounting education and
scholarship, in addition to its benefit to faculty and students to have
access to the advanced view of U.S. GAAP that will be used by accounting
professionals.
******************
This advertisement was sent to you from the American Accounting Association.
This message includes valuable information about upcoming events hosted by
the American Accounting Association. If you no longer want to receive email
announcements from us, please send an email to
office@aaahq.org with "EMAIL OPT-OUT" in the subject line.
American Accounting Association | 5717 Bessie Drive | Sarasota, FL
34233-2399 | Phone: (941) 921-7747 | Fax: (941) 923-4093 |
Office@aaahq.org
The FASB home page is at
http://www.fasb.org/home
June 24, 2009 Update
There was some doubt initially about whether the free or discounted faculty
and student access version of the FASB Codification database would be the
"Professional" version (that includes searching and cross-referencing at an $850
single user license per year).
The AAA registration site for the discounted ($150 annual discount price)
version makes it clear that accounting education departments or schools will get
the full "Professional" version at a discount, thereby saving each academic
program $700 per year savings per license. What is not yet perfectly clear is
whether this is a single-user access license. My reading is that multiple users
within a department or school can use the Codification database at the same
time. I could be wrong.
The AAA program enrollment site for this discounted version is
http://aaahq.org/FASB/Access.cfm
The form is at
https://aaahq.org/AAAforms/FASB/enroll.cfm
Since all future financial statements will no longer reference hard copy
sources like FAS 166 or EITF 98-1 or FIN 48, it is vital for students and
teachers and researchers to have access to the Codification database for
financial statement analysis.
Reasons why registration for the Codification database are important are
given at
http://www.cfo.com/article.cfm/13854787/c_2984368/?f=archives
Also see
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#MethodsForSetting
All users will
have free access to the Codification database, but not the free access to the
$850 “Professional” searching and cross-referencing services.
FREE access to ANNUAL REPORTS in XBRL ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/XBRLandOLAP.htm#TimelineXBRL
From EDGAR Online ---
http://www.tryxbrl.org/
- Finance Test Questions ---
http://financetestquestions.wikispaces.com/
Watch the Video
"Sometimes we can't see the forest for the trees," by Jim Mahar,
FinanceProfessor Blog, May 27, 2009 ---
http://financeprofessorblog.blogspot.com/2009/05/sometimes-we-cant-see-forest-for-trees.html
Part Behavioral finance, part cycling, and part a
study in how the brain works, the following "Test" is eye opening at least.
We all get so caught up in seeing what we want to
see that we sometimes miss the obvious. This effects us in many ways: In
finance, if bullish (optimistic), we are more apt to see the good news, if
bearish (pessimistic) you see only bad news.
That is one reason why big break throughs happen
from those outside the field. It is one reason why sabbaticals and vacations
are important. But it can also have important implications in many other
ways.
Go ahead, take the test. It takes about a minute
---
Click Here
You can order back issues or relevant links management and accounting
books and journals from MAAW ---
http://maaw.info/
Free Access to Back Issues of The Accounting Review ---
http://maaw.info/TheAccountingReview.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on special purpose (variable interest)
entities are at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen//theory/00overview/speOverview.htm
"Visualization of Multidimensional Data" ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/352wpVisual/000DataVisualization.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on XBRL are at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/XBRLandOLAP.htm#XBRLextended
Accounting for Electronic Commerce, Including Controversies
on Business Valuation, ROI, and Revenue Reporting ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce.htm
Comparisons of International IAS Versus FASB Standards ---
http://www.deloitte.com/dtt/cda/doc/content/pocketiasus.pdf
Bob Jensen's Enron Quiz (with answers) ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudEnronQuiz.htm
Tom Selling's blog The Accounting Onion (great on theory and practice)
---
http://accountingonion.typepad.com/
"Corporate Reports Now Searchable Via EDGAR," SmartPros, June
16, 2006 ---
http://accounting.smartpros.com/x53502.xml
Investors and analysts can now search the full
text of every SEC document filed by companies within the last two years.
They'll also be able to retrieve mutual fund filings by fund or share
class.
The company filing search engine enables
real-time, full-text searches of filings on the entirety of the SEC's
EDGAR (Electronic Document, Gathering, Analysis and Retrieval) database
of company filings for the last two years. The tool can be found at
http://www.sec.gov/edgar/searchedgar/webusers.htm.
SEC Chairman Christopher Cox, a strong
proponent of using the Internet to post dynamic financial reports and to
serve as a tool for investors and analysts made the announcement in his
opening remarks at the SEC's Interactive Data Roundtable in Washington,
D.C.
"This new full-text search capability will give
investors and analysts instant access to the specific information they
want," said Cox.
The new mutual fund search capability was made
possible when the SEC recently required that filings contain a unique
numerical identifier for each fund and share class. Investors will be
able to find relevant filings by searching for the name of their own
fund. In the past, searching for information on particular funds and
particular share classes within funds was very difficult, because a
single prospectus might contain information about many mutual funds and
share classes.
The SEC is asking users of this Web site
feature to supply feedback, including suggestions for additional
functions, so that further improvements to the site can be considered
and implemented.
Paul Pacter has been working hard to both maintain his international
accounting site and to produce a comparison guide between international and
Chinese GAAP. He states the following on May 26, 2005 at
http://www.iasplus.com/index.htm
May 26, 2005: Deloitte (China) has published
a comparison of accounting standards in the People's Republic of China and
International Financial Reporting Standards as of March 2005. The comparison
is available in both English and Chinese. China has different levels of
accounting standards that apply to different classes of entities. The
comparison relates to the standards applicable to the largest companies
(including all non-financial listed and foreign-invested enterprises) and
identifies major accounting recognition and measurement differences. Click
to download:
The chronology of events leading up to European adoption if common
international accounting standards ---
http://www.iasplus.com/restruct/resteuro.htm
Large International Accounting Firm History ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Four_auditors
Tom Selling's blog The Accounting Onion (great on theory and practice)
---
http://accountingonion.typepad.com/
This is a Good Summary of Various Forms of Business Risk
---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Risk_management
-
Enterprise Risk Management
-
Credit Risk
-
Market Risk
-
Operational Risk
-
Business Risk
-
Other Types of Risk?
I think a case can be made that the IASB is becoming more Bayesian as tests
of credit risk of cash flow impairments become weighted by subjective
probability distributions. Hence we have to dredge up more of the old Bayesian
theory for students if the IASB heads full bore into using subjective
probability distributions for credit impairment, fair value, etc. Reverend Bayes
may be smiling down on the FASB. I am not so enthusiastic about how it will help
investors to add this subjectivity to financial reporting ---
http://www.iasplus.com/dttletr/1007amortcost.pdf
"Group Audits, Group-Level Controls, and Component Materiality: How Much
Auditing Is Enough?" by Trevor R. Stewart and William R. Kinney, Jr., The
Accounting Review, March 2013 ---
http://aaajournals.org/doi/full/10.2308/accr-50314
Auditing standards now mandate that group auditors
determine and implement appropriate component materiality amounts, which
ultimately affect group audit scope, reliability, and value. However,
standards are silent about how these amounts should be determined and
methods being used in practice vary widely, lack theoretical support, and
may either fail to meet the audit objective or do so at excessive cost.
We develop a Bayesian group audit model
that generalizes and extends the
single-component audit risk model to aggregate assurance across multiple
components. The model formally incorporates group auditor knowledge of
group-level structure, controls, and context as well as component-level
constraints imposed by statutory audit or other requirements. Application of
the model yields component materiality amounts that achieve the group
auditor's overall assurance objective by finding the optimal solution on an
efficient materiality frontier. Numerical results suggest group-level
controls and structured subgroups of components are central to efficient
group audits.
"Beyond Bayes: causality vs correlation," by Steve Hsu Professor of
physics at the University of Oregon, Information Processing, July 10,
2010 ---
http://infoproc.blogspot.com/2010/07/beyond-bayes-causality-vs-correlation.html
A draft paper by Harvard graduate student James Lee
(student of Steve Pinker; I'd love to post the paper here but don't know yet
if that's OK) got me interested in the work of statistical learning pioneer
Judea Pearl.
I found the essay
Bayesianism and Causality, or, why I am only a half-Bayesian
(excerpted below) a concise, and provocative,
introduction to his ideas.
Pearl is correct to say that humans think in terms of
causal models, rather than in terms of correlation. Our brains favor simple,
linear narratives. The effectiveness of physics is a consequence of the fact
that descriptions of natural phenomena are compressible into simple causal
models. (Or, perhaps it just looks that way to us ;-)
Judea Pearl: I
turned Bayesian in 1971, as soon as I began reading Savage’s monograph
The Foundations of Statistical Inference [Savage, 1962]. The arguments
were unassailable: (i) It is plain silly to ignore what we know, (ii) It
is natural and useful to cast what we know in the language of
probabilities, and (iii) If our subjective probabilities are erroneous,
their impact will get washed out in due time, as the number of
observations increases.
Thirty years later, I am still a devout Bayesian in the sense of (i),
but I now doubt the wisdom of (ii) and I know that, in general, (iii) is
false. Like most Bayesians, I believe that the knowledge we carry in our
skulls, be its origin experience, schooling or hearsay, is an invaluable
resource in all human activity, and that combining this knowledge with
empirical data is the key to scientific enquiry and intelligent
behavior. Thus, in this broad sense, I am a still Bayesian. However, in
order to be combined with data, our knowledge must first be cast in some
formal language, and what I have come to realize in the past ten years
is that the language of probability is not suitable for the task; the
bulk of human knowledge is organized around causal, not probabilistic
relationships, and the grammar of probability calculus is insufficient
for capturing those relationships. Specifically, the building blocks of
our scientific and everyday knowledge are elementary facts such as “mud
does not cause rain” and “symptoms do not cause disease” and those
facts, strangely enough, cannot be expressed in the vocabulary of
probability calculus. It is for this reason that I consider myself only
a half-Bayesian. ...
"Why Bayesian Rationality Is Empty, Perfect Rationality Doesn’t Exist,
Ecological Rationality Is Too Simple, and Critical Rationality Does the Job,"
Simoleon Sense, February 15, 2010 ---
Click Here
http://www.simoleonsense.com/why-bayesian-rationality-is-empty-perfect-rationality-doesn%e2%80%99t-exist-ecological-rationality-is-too-simple-and-critical-rationality-does-the-job/
"An Intuitive Explanation of Bayes': Theorem: Bayes' Theorem
for the curious and bewildered; an excruciatingly gentle introduction," by
Eliezer S., Yudkowsky, August 2009 ---
http://yudkowsky.net/rational/bayes
I think a case can be made that the IASB is becoming more Bayesian as tests
of credit risk of cash flow impairments become weighted by subjective
probability distributions. Hence we have to dredge up more of the old Bayesian
theory for students if the IASB heads full bore into using subjective
probability distributions for credit impairment, fair value, etc. Reverend Bayes
may be smiling down on the FASB. I am not so enthusiastic about how it will help
investors to add this subjectivity to financial reporting ---
http://www.iasplus.com/dttletr/1007amortcost.pdf
"Beyond Bayes: causality vs correlation," by Steve Hsu Professor of
physics at the University of Oregon, Information Processing, July 10,
2010 ---
http://infoproc.blogspot.com/2010/07/beyond-bayes-causality-vs-correlation.html
A draft paper by Harvard graduate student James Lee
(student of Steve Pinker; I'd love to post the paper here but don't know yet
if that's OK) got me interested in the work of statistical learning pioneer
Judea Pearl.
I found the essay
Bayesianism and Causality, or, why I am only a half-Bayesian
(excerpted below) a concise, and provocative,
introduction to his ideas.
Pearl is correct to say that humans think in terms of
causal models, rather than in terms of correlation. Our brains favor simple,
linear narratives. The effectiveness of physics is a consequence of the fact
that descriptions of natural phenomena are compressible into simple causal
models. (Or, perhaps it just looks that way to us ;-)
Judea Pearl: I
turned Bayesian in 1971, as soon as I began reading Savage’s monograph
The Foundations of Statistical Inference [Savage, 1962]. The arguments
were unassailable: (i) It is plain silly to ignore what we know, (ii) It
is natural and useful to cast what we know in the language of
probabilities, and (iii) If our subjective probabilities are erroneous,
their impact will get washed out in due time, as the number of
observations increases.
Thirty years later, I am still a devout Bayesian in the sense of (i),
but I now doubt the wisdom of (ii) and I know that, in general, (iii) is
false. Like most Bayesians, I believe that the knowledge we carry in our
skulls, be its origin experience, schooling or hearsay, is an invaluable
resource in all human activity, and that combining this knowledge with
empirical data is the key to scientific enquiry and intelligent
behavior. Thus, in this broad sense, I am a still Bayesian. However, in
order to be combined with data, our knowledge must first be cast in some
formal language, and what I have come to realize in the past ten years
is that the language of probability is not suitable for the task; the
bulk of human knowledge is organized around causal, not probabilistic
relationships, and the grammar of probability calculus is insufficient
for capturing those relationships. Specifically, the building blocks of
our scientific and everyday knowledge are elementary facts such as “mud
does not cause rain” and “symptoms do not cause disease” and those
facts, strangely enough, cannot be expressed in the vocabulary of
probability calculus. It is for this reason that I consider myself only
a half-Bayesian. ...
Statistics Lesson: Spanking is a cause of lower IQ?
U.S. children who were spanked had lower IQs four years
later than those not spanked, researchers found. University of New Hampshire
Professor Murray Straus, who is presenting the findings Friday at the
14th International Conference on Violence, Abuse
and Trauma, in San Diego, called the study
"groundbreaking." "The results of this research have major implications for the
well being of children across the globe," Straus said in a statement. "It is
time for psychologists to recognize the need to help parents end the use of
corporal punishment and incorporate that objective into their teaching and
clinical practice." "How often parents spanked
made a difference. The more spanking the, the slower the development of the
child's mental ability," Straus said. "But even small amounts of spanking made a
difference."
"Study: Spanking linked to lower IQ," Breitbart, September
25, 2009 ---
http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=upiUPI-20090925-121520-9596&show_article=1&catnum=0
Jensen Comment
I think Straus was frequently spanked as a child. Could it be that lower IQ
students get more frustrated and are inclined toward greater degrees of misbehavior?
This is a little like the historic 0.63 correlation between stork nests and
birth rates ---
http://www.jstor.org/pss/2983064
"You Might Already Know This ... ," by Benedict Carey, The New York
Times, January 10, 2011 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/11/science/11esp.html?_r=1&src=me&ref=general
In recent weeks, editors at a respected
psychology journal have been taking heat from
fellow scientists for deciding to accept a research report that claims to
show the existence of extrasensory perception.
The report, to be published this year in
The Journal of Personality and Social Psychology,
is not likely to change many minds. And the scientific critiques of the
research methods and data analysis of its author, Daryl J. Bem (and the peer
reviewers who urged that his paper be accepted), are not winning over many
hearts.
Yet
the episode has
inflamed one of the longest-running debates in science. For decades, some
statisticians have argued that the standard technique used to analyze data
in much of social science and medicine overstates many study findings —
often by a lot. As a result, these experts say, the literature is littered
with positive findings that do not pan out: “effective” therapies that are
no better than a placebo; slight biases that do not affect behavior;
brain-imaging correlations that are meaningless.
By incorporating statistical techniques that are
now widely used in other sciences —
genetics, economic modeling, even wildlife
monitoring — social scientists can correct for such problems, saving
themselves (and, ahem, science reporters) time, effort and embarrassment.
“I was delighted that this ESP paper was accepted
in a mainstream science journal, because it brought this whole subject up
again,” said James Berger, a statistician at
Duke University. “I was on a mini-crusade about
this 20 years ago and realized that I could devote my entire life to it and
never make a dent in the problem.”
In recent weeks, editors at a respected
psychology journal have been taking heat from
fellow scientists for deciding to accept a research report that claims to
show the existence of extrasensory perception.
The report, to be published this year in
The Journal of Personality and Social Psychology,
is not likely to change many minds. And the scientific critiques of the
research methods and data analysis of its author, Daryl J. Bem (and the peer
reviewers who urged that his paper be accepted), are not winning over many
hearts.
Yet
the episode has inflamed one of the
longest-running debates in science. For decades, some statisticians have
argued that the standard technique used to analyze data in much of social
science and medicine overstates many study findings — often by a lot. As a
result, these experts say, the literature is littered with positive findings
that do not pan out: “effective” therapies that are no better than a
placebo; slight biases that do not affect behavior; brain-imaging
correlations that are meaningless.
By incorporating statistical techniques that are
now widely used in other sciences —
genetics, economic modeling, even wildlife
monitoring — social scientists can correct for such problems, saving
themselves (and, ahem, science reporters) time, effort and embarrassment.
“I was delighted that this ESP paper was accepted
in a mainstream science journal, because it brought this whole subject up
again,” said James Berger, a statistician at
Duke University. “I was on a mini-crusade about
this 20 years ago and realized that I could devote my entire life to it and
never make a dent in the problem.”
The statistical approach that has dominated the
social sciences for almost a century is called significance testing. The
idea is straightforward. A finding from any well-designed study — say, a
correlation between a personality trait and the risk of depression — is
considered “significant” if its probability of occurring by chance is less
than 5 percent.
This arbitrary cutoff makes sense when the effect
being studied is a large one — for example, when measuring the so-called
Stroop effect. This effect predicts that naming the color of a word is
faster and more accurate when the word and color match (“red” in red
letters) than when they do not (“red” in blue letters), and is very strong
in almost everyone.
“But if the true effect of what you are measuring
is small,” said Andrew Gelman, a professor of statistics and political
science at
Columbia University, “then by necessity anything
you discover is going to be an overestimate” of that effect.
Consider the following experiment. Suppose there
was reason to believe that a coin was slightly weighted toward heads. In a
test, the coin comes up heads 527 times out of 1,000.
Is this significant evidence that the coin is
weighted?
Classical analysis says yes. With a fair coin, the
chances of getting 527 or more heads in 1,000 flips is less than 1 in 20, or
5 percent, the conventional cutoff. To put it another way: the experiment
finds evidence of a weighted coin “with 95 percent confidence.”
Yet many statisticians do not buy it. One in 20 is
the probability of getting any number of heads above 526 in 1,000 throws.
That is, it is the sum of the probability of flipping 527, the probability
of flipping 528, 529 and so on.
But the experiment did not find all of the numbers
in that range; it found just one — 527. It is thus more accurate, these
experts say, to calculate the probability of getting that one number — 527 —
if the coin is weighted, and compare it with the probability of getting the
same number if the coin is fair.
Statisticians can show that this ratio cannot be
higher than about 4 to 1, according to Paul Speckman, a statistician, who,
with Jeff Rouder, a psychologist, provided the example. Both are at the
University of Missouri and said that the simple
experiment represented a rough demonstration of how classical analysis
differs from an alternative approach, which emphasizes the importance of
comparing the odds of a study finding to something that is known.
The point here, said Dr. Rouder, is that 4-to-1
odds “just aren’t that convincing; it’s not strong evidence.”
And yet classical significance testing “has been
saying for at least 80 years that this is strong evidence,” Dr. Speckman
said in an e-mail.
The critics have been crying foul for half that
time. In the 1960s, a team of statisticians led by Leonard Savage at the
University of Michigan showed that the classical
approach could overstate the significance of the finding by a factor of 10
or more. By that time, a growing number of statisticians were developing
methods based on the ideas of the
18th-century English mathematician Thomas Bayes.
Bayes devised a way to update the probability for a
hypothesis as new evidence comes in.
So in evaluating the strength of a given finding,
Bayesian (pronounced BAYZ-ee-un) analysis incorporates known probabilities,
if available, from outside the study.
It might be called the “Yeah, right” effect. If a
study finds that kumquats reduce the risk of heart disease by 90 percent,
that a treatment cures alcohol addiction in a week, that sensitive parents
are twice as likely to give birth to a girl as to a boy, the Bayesian
response matches that of the native skeptic: Yeah, right. The study findings
are weighed against what is observable out in the world.
In at least one area of medicine — diagnostic
screening tests — researchers already use known probabilities to evaluate
new findings. For instance, a new lie-detection test may be 90 percent
accurate, correctly flagging 9 out of 10 liars. But if it is given to a
population of 100 people already known to include 10 liars, the test is a
lot less impressive.
It correctly identifies 9 of the 10 liars and
misses one; but it incorrectly identifies 9 of the other 90 as lying.
Dividing the so-called true positives (9) by the total number of people the
test flagged (18) gives an accuracy rate of 50 percent. The “false
positives” and “false negatives” depend on the known rates in the
population.
Continued in article
What went wrong with accountics research ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#WhatWentWrong
Skills and knowledge should be required as part of the pre-certification
education of CPAs
Prompted by New York’s forthcoming adoption of the
150-hour requirement to sit for the CPA exam, the NYSSCPA’s Quality Enhancement
Policy Committee drafted a white paper to encourage discussion on what skills
and knowledge should be required as part of the pre-certification education of
CPAs. This white paper, which was approved by the Society’s Board of Directors,
is presented here, along with additional commentary from the NYSSCPA’s Higher
Education Committee.
Quality Enhancement Policy Committee Sharon Sabba Fierstein, Chair, August 2008
---
http://www.nysscpa.org/cpajournal/2008/808/infocus/p26.htm
Mary-Jo Kranacher Editorial, CPA Journal, August 2008 ---
http://www.nysscpa.org/cpajournal/2008/808/essentials/p80.htm
Specific requirements for becoming a CPA, and the rights and obligations of a
licensed CPA, are set forth in the laws and regulations of 54 United States
jurisdictions ---
http://www.cpa-exam.org/global/boards.html
NASBA Tools ---
http://www.nasbatools.com/display_page
NASBA Resources (Includes documents and audio files on knowledge requirements)
---
http://www.nasba.org/nasbaweb/NASBAWeb.nsf/wpmtp?openform
Free and Fee CPA Review Courses ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Bookbob1.htm#010303CPAExam
Bob Jensen's threads on accountancy careers ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Bookbob1.htm#careers
"Pre-Med
Education Must Be Compatible with Liberal Arts Ideals," by Timothy R. Austin,
Inside Higher Ed, July 31, 2008 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2008/07/31/austin
Peter, Paul, and Barney: An Essay on 2008 U.S. Government Bailouts of
Private Companies ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/2008Bailout.htm
"SEC Comments and Trends An analysis of current Reporting Issues,"
Ernst & Young, October 2012 ---
Click Here
http://www.ey.com/Publication/vwLUAssetsAL/SECCommentsTrends_CC0357_October2012/$FILE/SECCommentsTrends_CC0357_October2012.pdf
Every year, we track the Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC) staff’s comments on public company filings to provide you
with insights on the SEC staff’s concerns and areas of focus. Although each
registrant’s facts and circumstances are different, the economic conditions
in which they operate and their financial reporting challenges are often
similar. Understanding the comments and trends discussed in this publication
can help as you head into the year-end reporting season.
In its comments, the SEC staff questions
disclosures that may conflict with SEC rules or accounting principles, as
well as disclosures the SEC staff believes could be enhanced or clarified.
The resolutions vary. In some cases, registrants sufficiently support their
existing accounting or disclosures, and in others they agree to expand
disclosures in future filings or amend previous filings. Appendix C of this
publication provides an overview of the SEC staff filing review process, as
well as best practices for responding to staff comments. While the SEC staff
continues to comment on familiar topics such as significant estimates,
revenue recognition, impairment and financial instruments, it has increased
its focus in other areas, including:
• Nonperformance covenants contained in lease
agreements and how these contractual provisions affect the classification of
leases
• Pro forma financial information disclosed in
registration statements and Form 8-Ks reporting a significant acquisition,
including how the requirements of Article 11 of Regulation S-X have been met
for various pro forma adjustments
• The presentation of guarantor condensed
consolidating information pursuant to the relief provided in Rule 3-10 of
Regulation S-X
Segment reporting continues to be a common area of
focus in SEC comment letters. The SEC staff often considers disaggregated
information to be better for users of financial statements. As a result, the
staff frequently questions registrants’ conclusions about operating segments
being economically similar and their aggregation into a reportable segment.
The SEC staff also requests that registrants provide more robust analysis of
their segments in their MD&A.
The number of SEC staff comments on loss
contingency disclosure requirements has stabilized over the past year. While
the SEC staff has said that it has seen improvement in the disclosure of
loss contingencies, it is expected to continue to focus on evaluating and
enforcing compliance with ASC 450 in its filing reviews.
The SEC staff continues to focus on disclosures for
registrants with foreign operations. In particular, the SEC staff has been
questioning the tax effects of operating in foreign jurisdictions, including
the effects on liquidity of indefinitely reinvesting foreign earnings. The
SEC staff also has been asking registrants to provide more detailed
disclosures about any exposure they may have to European debt. To help
companies determine what to disclose about their exposures to countries
experiencing significant economic, fiscal or political challenges, the SEC
staff issued
CF
Disclosure Guidance: Topic No. 4: European Sovereign Debt Exposures
in January 2012. CF disclosure
guidance is a new type of interpretive guidance that the SEC staff has been
using to provide observations and views about disclosures required by
existing SEC rules and regulations.
Management’s discussion and analysis (MD&A)
....................................... 1
Critical accounting estimates
.......................................................................... 1
Liquidity and capital resources
....................................................................... 3
Non-GAAP financial measures
........................................................................ 7
Results of operations
.....................................................................................
9
SEC reporting issues
............................................................................
11
Board structure and nominee criteria
............................................................ 11
Emerging growth companies
........................................................................ 12
Executive compensation disclosures
............................................................. 14
Guarantor financial information
.................................................................... 16
Internal control over financial reporting and
disclosure controls and procedures
..................................................................................
19
Materiality
...................................................................................................
21
Pro forma adjustments
...............................................................................
22
Related-party transactions
........................................................................ 24
Risk factors
.......................................................................................
.......... 25
State sponsors of terrorism
........................................................................ 27
XBRL exhibits
...................................................................................
........... 28
Other SEC reporting issues
......................................................................... 30
Financial statement
presentation..................................................
........ 31
Accounts receivable
..................................................................
........... 34
Business combinations
..........................................................
............... 36
Contingencies
....................................................................
.................. 38
Debt
.....................................................................................
................ 40
Fair value measurements
.................................................
.................... 41
Financial instruments
...................................................
........................ 44
Goodwill
.......................................................................
........................ 48
Impairment of long-lived assets
..............................
.............................. 51
Income taxes
............................................................................
............ 53
Intangible assets
...................................................................
............... 57
Investments in debt and equity securities
....................... ...................... 60
Leases
....................................................................................
............. 64
Pension and other postretirement employee benefit
plans .................... 65
Revenue recognition
..................................................................
.......... 68
Segment reporting
.................................................................
.............. 73
Share-based payments
......................................................
................... 77
Appendix A: Industry supplements ............
.................. 82
Automotive supplement
......................................................
......................... 82
Banking supplement
..........................................................
........................... 84
Insurance supplement
.................................................
................................. 93
Life sciences supplement
........................................................
...................... 95
Media and entertainment supplement
..................................... ................... 106
Mining and metals supplement
.................................................................... 108
Oil and gas supplement
........................................................
...................... 110
Provider care
supplement................................................
........................... 115
Real estate supplement
...............................................................
............... 117
Retail and consumer products supplement
.................................................. 120
Technology supplement
.............................................................
................ 123
Telecommunications supplement
.......................................................... ...... 127
Appendix B: Foreign Private Issuers supplement
........... 128
Appendix C: SEC review process and best practices
...... 135
Appendix D: Abbreviations
................................................ 140
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting theory are at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm
Where I Made My Money
Consulting and How
If you think I’m a great fan of historical cost, Pat, you’re nuts.
Pat Walters at Fordham University asked how I
found the time to make so many Camtasia videos on top of other things I do like
send out AECM messages by the thousands.
My first answer is that the time I spent making most of my
Camtasia videos actually saved me much more time, especially boring time at
having to repeat demos to confused students who lined up outside may office all
day long on many days. My second answer is that Camtasia videos, one in
particular, led to a lot of consulting opportunities around the world.
First I should note that my teaching style has always been
costly in terms of my time. When I taught any course I insisted on my students
learning technical details. For example, when I taught Accounting Information
Systems (AIS), I did not just teach theory of relational databases. I
insisted that my students learn relational database software, which happened to
be MS Access because that’s the only relational database software that Trinity
University would provide for my students.
I did not want to take up much class time demonstrating use
of software. Instead, each week I passed out a list of Possible Quiz Questions (PQQs)
where each PQQ had a recipe for doing a task in MS Access, usually by focusing
on the Northwind Database that used to be available from Microsoft. In class
each student had a computer in an electronic classroom. I randomly picked a few
PQQs with changed inputs and gave a quiz in every class throughout the semester
--- even if we were no longer even discussing database theory in class.
Invariably students or usually pairs of students could not
get my PQQ recipes to fully work. I found myself spending a typical day
repeatedly demonstrating the same thing over and over again to different pairs
of students. So I commenced to make Camtasia videos that cut down over 95% of
the student traffic regarding PQQ issues. You can sample one or more of my PQQ
videos at
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/acct5342/
When I taught AIS I made my students learn how to use the
Excel pivot tables provided with each of the Microsoft annual financial
statements. These are a bit tricky to use, so I made the helper videos linked at
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/acct5342/MicrosoftPivots/
When I taught Accounting Theory, I made my students do XBRL
financial statement analysis of a number of companies that the Korean KOSDAQ
stock exchange marked up with XBRL tags. KOSDAQ provided reader software to
analyze those tags. My students had great difficulty on these assignments --- so
I made the XBRLdemos2005.wmv video file listed at
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/windowsmedia/
Now let’s talk about the most important video that I
ever made ---
a video that helped me pay for my house up here in the mountains.
When I taught Accounting Theory, about a third of the course was spent on
technical details in FAS 133 and IAS 39 and much of this time was spent on
teaching the first 10 examples in Appendix B of FAS 133 for which my main
teaching guides are the 133ex Excel Workbooks listed at
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/
These files still are being downloaded by thousands of strangers around the
world.
But FAS 133 sometimes was not sufficiently detailed to suit
me. For example, in Example 5 of FAS 133 the FASB simply provides the interest
rate swap values out of thin air. I made my students learn how to value interest
rate swaps. For this purpose I created the wonder video 133ex05a.wmv video file
listed at
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/acct5341/
Supporting documentation can be found in the following two
files listed at
133ex05a.xls (the Effective spreadsheet within this Excel
workbook)
133ex05.htm file of a paper that Carl Hubbard and I published about swap
valuation
Also see
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speakers/133swapvalue.htm
Much of what I learned about swap valuation I learned from Carl.
Largely due to the 133ex05.htm paper that Carl and I
published, I have received over 1,000 inquiries by telephone or email from
investment bankers, Big Four auditors, and accounting professors around the
world asking me about swap valuation. Rather than repeat myself over and over, I
request that each of them watch my 133ex05a.wmv video from beginning to end.
That’s sometimes all they wanted to know, although on many occasions I get more
complicated questions afterwards, some of which I cannot answer and some of
which I can answer.
That one 133ex05a.wmv video plus my other free derivatives
accounting files have led to many consulting trips in the U.S., Canada, Mexico,
China, and Europe. It also led to invited lectures in those places plus New
Zealand. The lecture visits are listed at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/resume.htm#Presentations
Consulting fees ranged from $8,000 per day at GE Capital to $0 for folks that
really needed help in developing nations. A colleague professor of finance, Phil
Cooley, always said I sold myself too cheap. I think I usually was
overpaid.
If you think I’m a great fan of historical cost, Pat,
you’re nuts.
In retirement with my wife in ill health, I’ve cut back greatly on travel and
even turned down an offer of two lucrative years in a think tank in Australia.
But a few companies have since beat a path to my door up here in the White
Mountains where I spend usually a day with them consulting on FAS 133 and in
particular derivative financial instruments valuation. If you think I’m a
great fan of historical cost, Pat, you’re nuts.
Now, Pat, when you ask me where I found the time to make
all those Camtasia videos, my answer is that I made the time on a lot of
Saturdays and Sundays in my office at Trinity University. And these videos saved
me tenfold that amount of time with students. And they helped me buy a rather
expensive home up here in the White Mountains.
My free FAS 133 and IAS 39
tutorials (some with audio and video files) are listed at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm
My philosophy is that it’s
better to give than receive, and I found that in the process I received more
than I gave. I would not have learned nearly as much about FAS 133 and IAS 39
had I not given most of what I know away for free!
And the funny thing about consulting is that I often do not
know the technical answers raised by finance experts who literally beat a path
to my door. But I find that if we interactively begin to work through their
problems they usually ending up paying me for answers they reason out by
themselves from my ad hoc version of the Socratic process.
Dah
Bob Jensen's free FAS 133 and IAS tutorials (some with
audio and video files) can be found at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm
March 24, 2010 message to the AECM
I think professors who do not open share extensively on the Web
miss the boat.
Selfishness has its own punishments, and generosity has its own rewards.
Scroll most of the way down in this message for an example from XXXXX
Will Yancey was a pioneer in open sharing on the Web ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Yancey.htm
Will made a very good living consulting and found that open sharing pays
back enormously, much better in his case than any kind of paid advertising.
But if you would’ve known Will you would’ve also discovered that he shared
openly out of the kindness of his big heart. I doubt that he even thought
about payback when he commenced to open share so generously.
I was also
an early-on open sharing professor and never once did so with the thought of
payback in mind. However, I am forwarding the message below to show that
once of the benefits of open sharing is payback ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/threads.htm
Once again, however, I stress that I would open share if there
was not a penny of monetary payback. I open share because it makes me feel
good to make a difference in the academy of professors and students.
When you do open share technical content, potential clients find
your work using Google, Bing, and other Web crawlers.
I think professors who do not open share extensively miss the boat.
Selfishness has its own punishments, and generosity has its own rewards.
My threads on this type of problem are at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speakers/133swapvalue.htm
My excel workbook contains an “Effective” spreadsheet at in the
133ex05a.xls file at
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/
I also provide a 133ex05a.wmv video at
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/acct5341/
Professors Who Blog ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/accountingnews.htm
My Outstanding Educator Award Speech ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/AAAaward_files/AAAaward02.htm
From:
XXXXX
Sent: Wednesday, March 24, 2010 4:26 PM
To: Jensen, Robert
Subject: Interest Rate Swap Valuation?
Hi Bob,
I found you on the internet. We are doing a Dec 31 2009
audit and our client obtained a mortgage loan in 2009, and entered into a
fixed rate mortgage rate swap on the loans interest. I would like to get a
fair value quote for the swap at Dec. 31,2009. Would you be available to
consult with us on this valuation? Please advise interest and your fee?
Many thanks,
harry
XXXXX
Accounting for Derivative Financial Instruments and Hedging Activities
Hi Patricia,
The bottom line is that accounting authors, like intermediate textbook
authors, provide lousy coverage of FAS 133 and IAS 39 because they just do not
understand the 1,000+ types of contracts that are being accounted for in those
standards. Some finance authors understand the contracts but have never shown an
inclination to study the complexities of FAS 133 and IAS 39 (which started out
as a virtual clone of FAS 133).
My 2006 Accounting Theory syllabus before I retired can be viewed at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/acct5341.htm
There are some great textbooks on derivatives and hedging written by finance
professors, but those professors never delved into the complexities of FAS 133
and IAS 39. My favorite book may be out of print at the moment, but this was a
required book in my theory course: Derivatives: An Introduction by Robert A
Strong, Edition 2 (Thomson South-Western, 2005, ISBN 0-324-27302-9)
Professor Strong's book provides zero about FAS 133 and IAS 39, but my
students were first required to understand the contracts that they later had to
account for in my course. Strong's coverage is concise and relatively simple.
When first learning about hedging, my Trinity University graduate students
and CPE course participants loved an Excel workbook that I made them study at
www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/Calgary/CD/Graphing.xls
Note the tabs on the bottom that take you to different spreadsheets.
There are some really superficial books written by accounting professors who
really never understood derivatives and hedging in finance.
Sadly, much of my tutorial material is spread over hundreds of different
links.
However, my dog and pony CD that I used to take on the road such as a
training course that I gave for a commodities trading outfit in Calgary can be
found at
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/Calgary/CD/ T
his was taken off of the CD that I distributed to each participant in each CPE
course, and now I realize that a copyrighted item on the CD should be removed
from the Web.
In particular, note the exam material given at
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/Calgary/CD/ExamMaterial/
My students had access to this material before they took my exams.
Note that some of the illustrations and exam answers have changed over time.
For example, the exam material on embedded derivatives is still relevant under
FASB rules whereas the IASB just waved a magic wand and said that clients no
longer have to search for embedded derivatives even though they're not "clearly
and closely related" to the underlyings in their host contracts. I think this is
a cop out by the IASB.
Links to my tutorials on FAS 133 and IAS 39, including a long history of
multimedia, can be found at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm
Probably the most helpful thing I ever generated was the glossary at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speakers/133glosf.htm
What made me the most money consulting in this area can be found at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speakers/133swapvalue.htm
But the core of what I taught about derivatives and hedge accounting in my
accounting theory course can be found in the FAS 133 Excel spreadsheets listed
near the top of the document at
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/
I also salted my courses with real world illustrations of scandals regarding
derivatives instruments contracts, a continuously updated timeline of which is
provided at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#DerivativesFrauds
Hope this helps. Once again you may want to look at the exam material at
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/Calgary/CD/ExamMaterial/
The bottom line is that accounting authors like intermediate textbook authors
provide lousy coverage of FAS 133 and IAS 39 because they just do not understand
the 1,000+ types of contracts that are being accounted for in those standards.
Some finance authors understand the contracts but have never shown an
inclination to delve into the complexities of FAS 133 and IAS 39 (which started
out as a virtual clone of FAS 133).
Respectfully,
Bob Jensen
Limits of Big Data
The End of Accounting and the Path
Forward
by Arthur J. Radin, CPA and Thomas Selling
https://www.cpajournal.com/2017/12/14/icymi-end-accounting-path-forward/
CPA Journal
Editors’ Note: Published this past June, Baruch Lev and Fang Gu’s The End
of Accounting and the Path Forward for Investors and Managers (Wiley)
has generated a great deal of controversy within the profession. The CPA
Journal presents two contrasting perspectives on this thought-provoking
book: Arthur J. Radin questions whether the authors are right about the
conclusions they draw from the data, and Thomas I. Selling agrees with some
of their recommendations but disagrees about the linkages to value creation.
Jensen Comment 1
This is my Comment 1 since I want to reflect more on the Radin and Selling
review of the Lev and Gu arguments. Let me say that I really like parts Radin
and Selling review. I've always been disappointed in Baruch Lev's many writings
on intangibles. Lev is great at finding fault but offers nothing (as far as I
can tell it's zero) to find a better way to reliably measure or even disclose
intangibles. Lev writes so much, and for me Lev's attempted positive
contributions are always a huge disappointment.
If Lev's proposals (actually unrealistic dreams) really lowered
cost of capital more firms would be routinely applying Lev's proposals.
Like Ijiri's "Force Accounting" Lev is reaching into the clouds
to touch the angels.
The title "The End of Accounting" seems to be an attempt to
attract attention with an absurd title just like political economist Francis
Fukuyama tried to attract attention with his book "The End of History."
Obviously neither accounting nor history will come to an "end." Accounting will
come to an end when audited financial statements no longer impact portfolio
decisions of investors and employment decisions of business firms such as the
firing of a CEO who fails to meet "earnings" targets. Fukuyama later wrote that
history did not end after all. I wish Lev and Gu would write an article that
admits accounting did not end after all (no thanks to them).
Let me come back to
Comment 2 on these matters once I have more time to think about Comment
2.
Comment 2
Added on December 19, 2017
Comment 2
Accountancy evolved over thousands of years to become what it is rather than
what some academic theorists would like it to be. The best example is the most
popular index used by financial analysts and investors, namely the accounting
net income of a business or some variation thereof such as earnings-per-share (eps)
or other comprehensive income (OCI). Economic theorists would prefer economic
income defined as the amount of discounted net cash flows of a business over all
future time. But neither economists nor accountants have ever been able to
measure economic income reliably because only soothsayers estimate all future
net cash flows, and those soothsayers never agree on the numbers appearing in
their fortune-telling crystal balls.
Traditional for-profit (business) and not-for-profit (e.g., governmental)
accountancy now guided by either national standard setters (e.g., the FASB and
GASB in the USA) or international accounting standard setters (e.g., the
IASB) survived Darwinian-styled evolution over thousands of years because
multiple stakeholders find it to have utility for predicting financial futures
of an organization, stewardship and inputs into macroeconomic analyses. Today
accounting traditions and rules are rooted in the past (e.g. historical cost
book values), present (e.g., market values of derivatives and other marketable
securities), and future (e.g., discounted values of pension obligations).
Baruch Lev's many writings suggest that the biggest controversy in
accountancy is how intangibles are measured and disclosed. See the many books
and papers cited at his home page at
http://www.stern.nyu.edu/faculty/bio/baruch-lev
Baruch writes very well when it comes to emphasizing the importance of
intangibles in predicting a firm's financial future and laying out criticisms of
the present accounting traditions and standards in measuring and otherwise
disclosing such standards. But the world pretty much ignores his soothsayer
suggestions for intangibles measurement and disclosure.
My best illustration of this is what Baruch has to say about Enron's
intangibles as documented at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#***EnronIntangibles
Question:
Where were Enron's intangible assets? In particular, what was
its main intangible asset that has been overlooked in terms of
accounting for intangibles? |
My answer is at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory02.htm#***EnronIntangibles
Lev's answer essentially was that since he could not find Enron's intangibles
there weren't any intangible assets. My answer is that there were highly
significant intangible assets that could neither be measured in any meaningful
way nor even disclosed without self-incrimination since many of them arose from
illegal bribes and other crimes that gave Enron power around the world and most
importantly inside USA government. Most of Enron's future revenues derived
from the intangible asset of political power. To the extent this intangible
asset arises from shady political activities Enron could not disclose, let alone
measure, the massive value of its political power intangible asset.
Tom Selling leans toward replacement cost valuation of intangible and
tangible assets. I would contend that only soothsayers can measure the
replacement cost of political power.
However, as Radin and Selling suggest not being able to disclose and measure
all important intangibles does not destroy the utility of accountancy or cause
the "end of accountancy" as we know it today. Just because the medical
profession cannot prevent cancer or even save the majority of Stage 4 cancer
patients does not destroy the utility of what the medical profession can do for
such patents. Accountancy is what it is and I do not
think it will "end" because of things it cannot yet do and probably will never
be able to do such as measure and disclose the intangible asset of political
power of a multinational company.
The Quill Pen Isn't What it Used to Be by a Long Shot: Software That
Turns Data into a Narrative Story
"Robot Journalist Finds New Work on Wall Street: Software that turns
data into written text could help us make sense of a coming tsunami of data," by
Tom Simonite, MIT's Technology Review, January 9, 2015 ---
http://www.technologyreview.com/news/533976/robot-journalist-finds-new-work-on-wall-street/?utm_campaign=newsletters&utm_source=newsletter-daily-all&utm_medium=email&utm_content=20150114
Software that was first put to work writing news
reports has now found another career option: drafting reports for financial
giants and U.S. intelligence agencies.
The writing software, called Quill, was developed
by
Narrative Science, a Chicago company set up in
2010 to commercialize technology developed at Northwestern University that
turns numerical data into a written story. It wasn’t long before Quill was
being used to report on baseball games for TV and online sports outlets, and
company earnings statements for
clients such as Forbes.
Quill’s early career success generated headlines of
its own, and the software was seen by some as evidence that intelligent
software might displace human workers. Narrative Science CEO Stuart Frankel
says that the publicity, even if some of it was negative, was a blessing. “A
lot of people felt threatened by what we were doing, and we got a lot of
coverage,” he says. “It led to a lot of inquiries from all different
industries and to the evolution to a different business.”
Narrative Science is now renting out Quill’s
writing skills to financial customers such as T. Rowe Price, Credit Suisse,
and USAA to write up more in-depth, lengthy reports on the performance of
mutual funds that are then distributed to investors or regulators.
“It goes from the job of a small army of people
over weeks to just a few seconds,” says Frankel. “We do 10- to 15-page
documents for some financial clients.”
An investment from In-Q-Tel, the CIA’s investment
division, led the company to work from multiple U.S. intelligence agencies.
Asked about that work, Frankel says only that “The communication challenges
of the U.S. intelligence community are very similar to those of our other
customers.” Altogether, Quill now churns out millions of words per day.
The software’s output can be impressive for
software, but it can’t write without some numerical data for inspiration. It
performs statistical analysis on that data, looking for significant events
or trends, and it draws on knowledge about key concepts such as bankruptcy,
profit, and revenue, and how such concepts are related.
The following paragraph, from an investment report,
shows that Quill can write passable text for such a document, but it can
still feel as if it were written by a computer.
“The energy sector was the main contributor to
relative performance, led by stock selection in energy equipment and
services companies. In terms of individual contributors, a position in
energy equipment and services company Oceaneering International was the
largest contributor to returns. Stock selection also contributed to
relative results in the health care sector. Positioning in health care
equipment and supplies industry helped most.”
Quill is programmed with rules of writing that it
uses to structure sentences, paragraphs, and pages, says
Kristian Hammond, a
computer science professor at Northwestern University and chief scientist at
Narrative Science. “We know how to introduce an idea, how not to repeat
ourselves, how to get shorter,” he says.
Companies can also tune Quill’s style and use of
language based on what they need it to write. It can accentuate the positive
in marketing copy, or go for exhaustive detail in a regulatory filing, for
example.
Continued in article
Jensen Comment
One problem of with financial data versus scientific data is that financial data
possibly has much higher variation in quality and standardization. For example,
the FASB cannot even define concepts of "earnings" and derivations from earnings
measures like P/E ratios. This makes comparisons of one company's "net earnings"
over multiple years dubious. Even more dubious are comparisons of "net
earnings," eps, and P/E ratios of different companies doubtful no matter how
good the Quill software is for generating narratives out of financial data.
Accounting History Corner
"SPROUSE’S WHAT-YOU-MAY-CALL-ITS: FUNDAMENTAL INSIGHT OR MONUMENTAL MISTAKE?"
by Sudipta Basu and Gegory B. Waymire
Accounting Historians Journal, 2010, Vol. 37, no. 1 ---
http://umiss.lib.olemiss.edu:82/articles/1038402.7233/1.PDF
Hi Glen,
I have some troubles with the link as well. For me, the PDF will run in
my Windows 7 laptop but not my newer Windows 10 laptop, although this
morning the link I gave you is not working on either laptop.
It may be that you have to route to the article as described below.
Try going to
http://www.olemiss.edu/depts/general_library/dac/files/ahj.html
Then scroll down to 2010 Volume 37 Number 1 and click on the line that
says to View Searchable PDF Text File
Then scroll down to the article page numbers may not exactly coincide with
the table of contents depending upon the resolution of your browser.
Abstract
We critically evaluate Sprouse’s 1966 Journal of Accountancyarticle, which
prodded the FASB towards a balance-sheet approach. We highlight three errors
in this article.
First,
Sprouse confuses necessary and sufficient conditions by arguing that
good accounting systems must satisfy the balance-sheet equation.
Second, Sprouse’s insinuation that financial analysts rely on
balance-sheet analysis is contradicted by contemporary and current
security-analysis textbooks, analysts’ written reports, and interviews
with analysts. Third,
and most crucially, Sprouse does not recognize that the primary role
of accounting systems is to help managers discover and exploit profit
able exchange opportunities, without which firms cannot survive
CONCLUDING OBSERVATIONS ON THE LEGACY OF THE
ASSET-LIABILITY APPROACH
Sprouse [1966] is important neither because of its
conceptual insights nor because of its unpersuasive evidence. Rather, the
article matters mainly because it shaped the FASB’s rhetoric and subsequent
standard-setting approach and today’s international standard-setting agenda.
Sprouse’s misinterpretation of Graham and Dodd’s Security Analysis
foreshadows the FASB and IASB misinterpretation of Hicks [1939]. Sprouse and
the two Boards are equally culpable in ignoring actual security-analyst
behavior when advocating their preferences, relying instead on made-up
“users” [Young 2006]. Thus, the current FASB/IASB Conceptual Framework [FASB,
2006] is justifiably seen as a direct descen dant of Sprouse [1966].
Sprouse and the two Boards ignore the implications
(or are unaware) of one of the major stylized facts of U.S. financial
reporting history – the shift from a balance-sheet approach to an
income-statement approach during 1900-1930. The shift to an income-statement
approach is usually attributed to the information needs of a massive influx
of individual investors into U.S. equity markets during this era [e.g.,
Hendriksen, 1970, pp. 51-55]. If individual equity investors are
primarily interested in balance-sheet information, then this shift should
not have occurred when it did. Sprouse and the two Boards never address this
salient historical evidence that contradicts their core as assumption of
investor information needs. More broadly, Sprouse and the two Boards ignore
the historical development of the revenue-expense approach, both in theory
and practice, which we survey in this paper. If financial accounting has
emerged over many generations to maintain consilience with the biologically
evolved human brain [Dickhaut et al., 2010], then an abrupt change to a
fair-value-based, asset-liability approach might well make financial reports
less useful to actual human readers.
Contrary to theoretical ruminations of Sprouse,
security analysts to this day rely primarily on earnings forecasts in
valuing firms. However, today’s analysts can construct their earnings
forecasts only after adjusting for many more non-recurring items that the
FASB has introduced into the income statement. Although SFAS 130 [FASB,
1997] introduced a broader, comprehensive income concept that includes even
more non-recurring items, analysts show no interest in forecasting it or
using it in their analyses. We believe that the FASB’s shift in focus to the
balance sheet has created bigger problems than merely whether financial
analysts have to adjust for new income statement “thingamajigs” instead of
balance sheet “what-you-may-call-its.”
We claim that the lack of analyst interest in the
FASB-mandated, non-recurring items is symptomatic of a monumental mistake in
the asset-liability approach; specifically, it is misaligned with the
reasons that firms exist and the resulting demand for causaldouble-entry
accounting as an economic institution. In other words, while the
asset-liability approach is constructively rational, i.e. deduced from
assumptions that work in a theoretical model, it is unlikely to be
ecologically rational in the sense of improving firms’ survival prospects in
the complex real world [Sargent, 2008; Smith, 2008].
Net earnings and EBITDA cannot be defined since
the FASB and IASB elected to give the balance sheet priority over the income
statement in financial reporting ---
"The Asset-Liability Approach: Primacy does not mean Priority,"
by Robert Bloomfield, FASRI Financial Accounting Standards Research
Initiative, October 6, 2009 ---
http://www.fasri.net/index.php/2009/10/the-asset-liability-approach-primacy-does-not-mean-priority/
Similar problems arise with variations in quality and standardization of
components of balance sheets. For example, measures of cash might be relatively
accurate in terms of error variations, whereas variations in goodwill and other
intangibles is subject to high error variations.
"Whither the Concept of Income?" by Shizuki Saito University of Tokyo
and Yoshitaka Fukui Aoyama Gakuin University, SSRN, May 17, 2015 ---
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2607234
Abstract:
Since the 1970s, the decision-usefulness has taken center stage and our
attention has been concentrated on valuation of assets and liabilities
instead of income measurement. The concept of income, once considered the
gravitational center of accounting has lost its primacy and become a
byproduct of the balance sheet derived from the measurement of assets and
liabilities.
However, we have not been equipped with robust
conceptual foundation supporting theoretically reasoned accounting
measurement. It is not only theoretically but also practically important to
renew our seemingly waned interest in the concept of income because ongoing
reforms of accounting standards cannot be successfully implemented without a
sound understanding of the concept of income.
Be that as it may, net earnings and EBITDA are all-important because
investors change their portfolios based on net earnings and its derivatives more
than anything in the balance sheet.
"Accounting Alchemy," by Robert E. Verrecchia, Accounting Horizons,
September 2013, pp. 603-618.
Verrecchia alleges that it's not that managers have a functional fixation for
earnings metrics as it is that they believe that other managers and investors
are so fixated with earnings that it because of monumental importance not
because it is inherently a great metric but because they believe deeply that the
market itself makes this index of vital importance.
. . .
In summary, my thesis is that managers project that
others are fixated on earnings—independent of any evidence in support
of, or contrary to, this phenomenon. This leads to managers resisting the
inclusion in earnings items that fail to enhance performance, such as the
amortization of Goodwill, or measures that make future performance more
volatile, such as those based on fair value. In the absence of acknowledging
PEF and attempting to grapple with it, I continue to see confrontations over
accounting regulation along the lines of recent debates about fair value
accounting, in addition to further impediments along the path to greater
transparency in financial statements.
It's a bit like requiring calculus for undergraduate accounting courses.
Calculus probably is not essential in any undergraduate accounting course in the
curriculum, but faculty are fixated that the best accounting majors are the ones
do well in calculus. Similarly, investors change their portfolios based on
earnings, eps, EBITDA, and P/E ratios when in fact those metrics are not defined
and may have a lot of misleading noise and secret manipulation
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting theory or lack thereof ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm
From the CFO Journal's Morning Ledger on May 8, 201
The largest U.S. companies are booking their strongest
quarterly profits in five years,
as firms reap the benefits of years of belt tightening and finally see a
pickup in demand. But part of the improvement has come from keeping a lid on
spending, and many CEOs remain reluctant to change and open their wallets
for new projects, plants and people,
Thomas Gryta and Theo Francis write.
Profits at S&P 500 companies jumped an estimated 13.9% in the first quarter,
growing nearly twice as fast as revenue. The gains stretched across
industries, from Wall Street’s banks to Silicon Valley’s web giants, and
were helped by a rebound in the battered energy sector. The picture was a
marked improvement from a year ago, when profits fell 5%, and was the best
performance since the third quarter of 2011.
ensen Comment
Accounting standard setters cannot even operationally define the calculation of
earnings other than to make it a plug that makes the balance sheet balance. And
yet this plug remains as an exceedingly important driver of share prices in the
stock markets.
From the CFO Journal's Morning Ledger on May 5, 2017
Avon under pressure
Avon Products Inc.
Chief Executive Sheri McCoy faces new pressure following a surprise loss
that sent the cosmetics seller’s stock tumbling
Thursday.
Jensen Comment
Accounting standard setters cannot even operationally define the calculation of
earnings other than to make it a plug that makes the balance sheet balance. And
yet this plug remains as an exceedingly important driver of share prices in the
stock markets.
May 9, 2017 Question from Tom Selling
I’d like to brush up on the shortcomings of
Hicksian “income” for measuring the earnings of a business entity. Do
you (or anyone else on AECM, of course) have a reference (e.g., an article
or book chapter) to help me out?
May 9, 2017 Reply from Bob Jensen
John Hicks ---
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Hicks#Contributions_to_interpretation_of_income_for_accounting_purposes
There are numerous references given at
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Hicks#Contributions_to_interpretation_of_income_for_accounting_purposes
Here is one of references that I recommend that are in the accounting
literature. The main take away here is that fair value accounting takes us
closer to the Hicksian concept of income at the expense of reliability. I
might note that Professor Schipper over the years is a proponent of falr
value accounting. This is not a defense of historical cost accounting as
might have been written by AC Littleton or Yuji Ijiri.
"Earnings Quality," by Katherine Schipper and Linda Vincent, ACCOUNTING
HORIZONS Supplement 2003 pp. 97-110 ---
http://s3.amazonaws.com/academia.edu.documents/35504067/Schipper_image.pdf?AWSAccessKeyId=AKIAIWOWYYGZ2Y53UL3A&Expires=1494285864&Signature=BaLCa00HRPvplwgY2ee8Dmr7gzU%3D&response-content-disposition=inline%3B%20filename%3DEarnings_Quality.pdf
Especially note the references at the end of the commentary.
The main problem is that Hicksian Income in theory assumes all changes is
"wealth" or "well offness" where wealth includes much more than accountants
put on balance sheets. Examples include the many intangibles and contingent
liabilities that are left off balance sheets due to inability to measure
reliably such as the value of human resources and changes thereof. Also
accountants have never figured out how to measure the requisite "value in
use: as opposed to disposal value in a yard sale.
Bob Jensen
It would seem that, if the constraint of double-entry bookkeeping is removed as
a basis of financial reporting, the operational definitions of the major
performance indicator of "profit" for for-profit businesses will have to become
much more precise and operational than "profit" is presently defined as a
residual phenomenon in a double-entry bookkeeping system.
I think that the Hicksian concept of income and the Hicksian demand
functions, like Pareto optimality in general, are weak concepts defined mostly
for mathematical convenience that are not really very good guidelines for
real-world standard setters ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hicksian_demand_function
Also see
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hicks_optimality
Some alternative approaches to income suggested by
Hicks and by other writers and their relevance to conceptual frameworks for
accounting
"Hicksian Income in the Conceptual Framework" ---
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1576611
Michael Bromwich London School of Economics
Richard H. Macve London School of Economics & Political Science (LSE) -
Department of Accounting and Finance
Shyam Sunder Yale School of Management
March 22, 2010
Abstract:
In seeking to replace accounting ‘conventions’ by ‘concepts’ in the pursuit
of principles-based standards, the FASB/IASB joint project on the conceptual
framework has grounded its approach on a well-known definition of ‘income’
by Hicks. We welcome the use of theories by accounting standard setters and
practitioners, if theories are considered in their entirety.
‘Cherry-picking’ parts of a theory to serve the immediate aims of standard
setters risks distortion. Misunderstanding and misinterpretation of the
selected elements of a theory increase the distortion even more. We argue
that the Boards have selectively picked from, misquoted, misunderstood, and
misapplied Hicksian concepts of income. We explore some alternative
approaches to income suggested by Hicks and by other writers, and their
relevance to current debates over the Boards’ conceptual framework and
standards. Our conclusions about how accounting concepts and conventions
should be related differ from those of the Boards. Executive stock options (ESOs)
provide an illustrative case study.
IASB Plans Overhaul of
Financial Definitions
http://blogs.wsj.com/cfo/2016/11/02/iasb-plans-overhaul-of-financial-definitions/?mod=djemCFO_h
The International
Accounting Standards Board, or IASB, which sets reporting standards in more
than 120 countries, said Wednesday it would look at providing new
definitions of common financial terms such as earnings before interest and
taxes, or ebit.
The new definitions
will be introduced over the next five years, in order to provide sufficient
time for suggestions and comment from market participants.
The changes will not
result in new standards but will require the board to overhaul existing
ones.
At the moment, terms
like operating profit are not defined by the IASB. The aim is to help market
participants judge the suitability of a particular investment.
“We want to give
investors the right handles to look at a balance sheet,” said IASB chairman
Hans Hoogervorst.
Up until now,
International Financial Reporting Standards, known as IFRS, leave companies
too much flexibility in defining such terms, which often makes it difficult
to compare financials, Mr. Hoogervorst said.
“Even within sectors,
there is a lack of comparability,” Mr. Hoogervorst said. This affects both
investors and companies, he added.
It is too early to tell
what the changes will mean for companies reporting under IFRS, according to
Mr. Hoogervorst. “They should be less revolutionary than the introduction of
new standards but every change results in work”, he said.
Some firms might find
that they have less latitude when reporting financial results, he said. That
could mean more work.
Firms that decide
against adopting the new IASB definition for ebit, for example, could be
required to reconcile their own ebit calculation into one based on the
IASB’s definition.
The IASB in 2017 also
plans to finalize a single accounting model that would be applied to all
forms of insurance contracts.
Besides that, the board
will work on updating the system through which filers add disclosures to the
electronic versions of their financial statements. The system is updated on
a regular basis and the IASB produces an annual compilation of all changes
each year.
Bob
Jensen's threads on conceptual framework controversies ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#ConceptualFrameworks
Jensen Comment
It would seem that, if the constraint of double-entry bookkeeping is removed as
a basis of financial reporting, the operational definitions of the major
performance indicator of "profit" for for-profit businesses will have to become
much more precise and operational than "profit" is presently defined as a
residual phenomenon in a double-entry bookkeeping system.
"Mechanical Turk and the Limits of Big Data: The Internet is
transforming how researchers perform experiments across the social sciences,"
by Walter Frick, MIT's Technology Review, November 1, 2012 ---
Click Here
http://www.technologyreview.com/view/506731/mechanical-turk-and-the-limits-of-big-data/?utm_campaign=newsletters&utm_source=newsletter-daily-all&utm_medium=email&utm_content=20121102
It’s telling that the most interesting
presenter during MIT Technology Review’s
EmTech session on big data last week was not
really about big data at all. It was about
Amazon’s
Mechanical Turk, and the experiments it makes
possible.
Like many
other researchers,
sociologist and Microsoft researcher
Duncan Watts performs experiments using Mechanical
Turk, an online marketplace that allows users to pay others to complete
tasks. Used largely to fill in gaps in applications where human intelligence
is required, social scientists are increasingly turning to the platform to
test their hypotheses.
The point Watts made at EmTech was that, from his perspective, the
data revolution has less to do with the amount of data available and more to
do with the newly lowered cost of running online experiments.
Compare that to Facebook data scientists
Eytan Bakshy and Andrew Fiore, who presented right before Watts. Facebook,
of course, generates a massive amount of data, and the two
spoke of the experiments they perform to inform
the design of its products.
But what might have
looked like two competing visions for the future of data and hypothesis
testing are really two sides of the big data coin. That’s because data on
its own isn’t enough. Even the kind of experiment Bakshy and Fiore
discussed—essentially an elaborate A/B test—has its limits.
This is a point political forecaster and author Nate Silver discusses in his
recent book
The Signal and the Noise. After
discussing economic forecasters who simply gather as much data as possible
and then make inferences without respect for theory, he writes:
This kind of statement is becoming more common in
the age of Big Data. Who needs theory when you have so much information?
But this is categorically the wrong attitude to take toward forecasting,
especially in a field like economics, where the data is so noisy.
Statistical inferences are much stronger when backed up by theory or at
least some deeper thinking about their root causes.
Bakshy and Fiore no doubt understand
this, as they cited plenty of theory in their presentation. But Silver’s
point is an important one. Data on its own won’t spit out answers; theory
needs to progress as well. That’s where Watts’s work comes in.
Continued in article
A Recent Essay
"How Non-Scientific Granulation Can Improve Scientific Accountics"
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/temp/AccounticsGranulationCurrentDraft.pdf
By Bob Jensen
This essay takes off from the following quotation:
A recent accountics science study suggests
that audit firm scandal with respect to someone else's audit may be a reason
for changing auditors.
"Audit Quality and Auditor Reputation: Evidence from Japan," by Douglas
J. Skinner and Suraj Srinivasan, The Accounting Review, September
2012, Vol. 87, No. 5, pp. 1737-1765.
Our conclusions are subject
to two caveats. First, we find that clients switched away from ChuoAoyama in
large numbers in Spring 2006, just after Japanese regulators announced the
two-month suspension and PwC formed Aarata. While we interpret these events
as being a clear and undeniable signal of audit-quality problems at
ChuoAoyama, we cannot know for sure what drove these switches
(emphasis added). It
is possible that the suspension caused firms to switch auditors for reasons
unrelated to audit quality. Second, our analysis presumes that audit quality
is important to Japanese companies. While we believe this to be the case,
especially over the past two decades as Japanese capital markets have
evolved to be more like their Western counterparts, it is possible that
audit quality is, in general, less important in Japan
(emphasis added) .
Financial Statements Loss of Quality and
Predictive Power
"Stock Prices and Earnings: A History of Research," by Patricia M.
Dechow, Richard G. Sloan, and Jenny Zha, SSRN
(no longer available free as a download from SSRN),
Annual Review of Financial Economics, Vol. 6, pp. 343-363, 2014
December 2014 ($32 unless accessed free via your university's library
subscription)
http://www.annualreviews.org/doi/full/10.1146/annurev-financial-110613-034522
Abstract:
Accounting earnings summarize periodic corporate financial performance and
are key determinants of stock prices. We review research on the usefulness
of accounting earnings, including research on the link between accounting
earnings and firm value and research on the usefulness of accounting
earnings relative to other accounting and nonaccounting information. We also
review research on the features of accounting earnings that make them useful
to investors, including the accrual accounting process, fair value
accounting, and the conservatism convention. We finish by summarizing
research that identifies situations in which investors appear to
misinterpret earnings and other accounting information, leading to security
mispricing.
Jensen Comment
AAA Members may want to accompany this paper with Bill Beaver's recollections of
his own pioneering research on stock prices and earnings --- recollections given
at the American Accounting Association Annual Meetings as the 2014 Presidential
Scholar.
Video (free to AAA members who are subscribed to the AAA Commons) ---
http://commons.aaahq.org/hives/8d320fc4aa/summary
It is somewhat surprising that a predictor variable its
extended versions (e.g., earnings per share) that cannot be defined by the FASB
and IASB can be an effective predictor after it no longer can be defined.
By not being definable, there is little assurance that earnings, eps, etc. are
consistently measured over time for a single firm and across firms at a point in
time.
Accounting History Corner
"SPROUSE’S WHAT-YOU-MAY-CALL-ITS: FUNDAMENTAL INSIGHT OR MONUMENTAL MISTAKE?"
by Sudipta Basu and Gegory B. Waymire
Accounting Historians Journal, 2010, Vol. 37, no. 1 ---
http://umiss.lib.olemiss.edu:82/articles/1038402.7233/1.PDF
Hi Glen,
I have some troubles with the link as well. For me, the PDF will run in
my Windows 7 laptop but not my newer Windows 10 laptop, although this
morning the link I gave you is not working on either laptop.
It may be that you have to route to the article as described below.
Try going to
http://www.olemiss.edu/depts/general_library/dac/files/ahj.html
Then scroll down to 2010 Volume 37 Number 1 and click on the line that
says to View Searchable PDF Text File
Then scroll down to the article page numbers may not exactly coincide with
the table of contents depending upon the resolution of your browser.
Abstract
We critically evaluate Sprouse’s 1966 Journal of Accountancyarticle, which
prodded the FASB towards a balance-sheet approach. We highlight three errors
in this article.
First,
Sprouse confuses necessary and sufficient conditions by arguing that
good accounting systems must satisfy the balance-sheet equation.
Second, Sprouse’s insinuation that financial analysts rely on
balance-sheet analysis is contradicted by contemporary and current
security-analysis textbooks, analysts’ written reports, and interviews
with analysts. Third,
and most crucially, Sprouse does not recognize that the primary role
of accounting systems is to help managers discover and exploit profit
able exchange opportunities, without which firms cannot survive
CONCLUDING OBSERVATIONS ON THE LEGACY OF THE
ASSET-LIABILITY APPROACH
Sprouse [1966] is important neither because of its
conceptual insights nor because of its unpersuasive evidence. Rather, the
article matters mainly because it shaped the FASB’s rhetoric and subsequent
standard-setting approach and today’s international standard-setting agenda.
Sprouse’s misinterpretation of Graham and Dodd’s Security Analysis
foreshadows the FASB and IASB misinterpretation of Hicks [1939]. Sprouse and
the two Boards are equally culpable in ignoring actual security-analyst
behavior when advocating their preferences, relying instead on made-up
“users” [Young 2006]. Thus, the current FASB/IASB Conceptual Framework [FASB,
2006] is justifiably seen as a direct descen dant of Sprouse [1966].
Sprouse and the two Boards ignore the implications
(or are unaware) of one of the major stylized facts of U.S. financial
reporting history – the shift from a balance-sheet approach to an
income-statement approach during 1900-1930. The shift to an income-statement
approach is usually attributed to the information needs of a massive influx
of individual investors into U.S. equity markets during this era [e.g.,
Hendriksen, 1970, pp. 51-55]. If individual equity investors are
primarily interested in balance-sheet information, then this shift should
not have occurred when it did. Sprouse and the two Boards never address this
salient historical evidence that contradicts their core as assumption of
investor information needs. More broadly, Sprouse and the two Boards ignore
the historical development of the revenue-expense approach, both in theory
and practice, which we survey in this paper. If financial accounting has
emerged over many generations to maintain consilience with the biologically
evolved human brain [Dickhaut et al., 2010], then an abrupt change to a
fair-value-based, asset-liability approach might well make financial reports
less useful to actual human readers.
Contrary to theoretical ruminations of Sprouse,
security analysts to this day rely primarily on earnings forecasts in
valuing firms. However, today’s analysts can construct their earnings
forecasts only after adjusting for many more non-recurring items that the
FASB has introduced into the income statement. Although SFAS 130 [FASB,
1997] introduced a broader, comprehensive income concept that includes even
more non-recurring items, analysts show no interest in forecasting it or
using it in their analyses. We believe that the FASB’s shift in focus to the
balance sheet has created bigger problems than merely whether financial
analysts have to adjust for new income statement “thingamajigs” instead of
balance sheet “what-you-may-call-its.”
We claim that the lack of analyst interest in the
FASB-mandated, non-recurring items is symptomatic of a monumental mistake in
the asset-liability approach; specifically, it is misaligned with the
reasons that firms exist and the resulting demand for causaldouble-entry
accounting as an economic institution. In other words, while the
asset-liability approach is constructively rational, i.e. deduced from
assumptions that work in a theoretical model, it is unlikely to be
ecologically rational in the sense of improving firms’ survival prospects in
the complex real world [Sargent, 2008; Smith, 2008].
Net earnings and EBITDA cannot be defined since the FASB and IASB elected to
give the balance sheet priority over the income statement in financial reporting
---
"The Asset-Liability Approach: Primacy does not mean Priority,"
by Robert Bloomfield, FASRI Financial Accounting Standards Research
Initiative, October 6, 2009 ---
http://www.fasri.net/index.php/2009/10/the-asset-liability-approach-primacy-does-not-mean-priority/
"Whither the Concept of Income?" by Shizuki Saito University of Tokyo
and Yoshitaka Fukui Aoyama Gakuin University, SSRN, May 17, 2015 ---
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2607234
Abstract:
Since the 1970s, the decision-usefulness has taken center stage and our
attention has been concentrated on valuation of assets and liabilities
instead of income measurement. The concept of income, once considered the
gravitational center of accounting has lost its primacy and become a
byproduct of the balance sheet derived from the measurement of assets and
liabilities.
However, we have not been equipped with robust
conceptual foundation supporting theoretically reasoned accounting
measurement. It is not only theoretically but also practically important to
renew our seemingly waned interest in the concept of income because ongoing
reforms of accounting standards cannot be successfully implemented without a
sound understanding of the concept of income.
Be that as it may, net earnings and EBITDA are all-important because
investors change their portfolios based on net earnings and its derivatives more
than anything in the balance sheet.
"Accounting Alchemy," by Robert E. Verrecchia, Accounting Horizons,
September 2013, pp. 603-618.
Verrecchia alleges that it's not that managers have a functional fixation for
earnings metrics as it is that they believe that other managers and investors
are so fixated with earnings that it because of monumental importance not
because it is inherently a great metric but because they believe deeply that the
market itself makes this index of vital importance.
. . .
In summary, my thesis is that managers project that
others are fixated on earnings—independent of any evidence in support
of, or contrary to, this phenomenon. This leads to managers resisting the
inclusion in earnings items that fail to enhance performance, such as the
amortization of Goodwill, or measures that make future performance more
volatile, such as those based on fair value. In the absence of acknowledging
PEF and attempting to grapple with it, I continue to see confrontations over
accounting regulation along the lines of recent debates about fair value
accounting, in addition to further impediments along the path to greater
transparency in financial statements.
It's a bit like requiring calculus for undergraduate accounting courses.
Calculus probably is not essential in any undergraduate accounting course in the
curriculum, but faculty are fixated that the best accounting majors are the ones
do well in calculus. Similarly, investors change their portfolios based on
earnings, eps, EBITDA, and P/E ratios when in fact those metrics are not defined
and may have a lot of misleading noise and secret manipulation
Financial Statements Loss of Quality and
Predictive Power
Jensen Comment
I don't think the "The EBITDA Epidemic Takes Its Cue from Standard Setters."
Like Professor Verrecchia currently and my accounting Professor Bob
Jaedicke decades earlier I think the "EBITDA Epidemic" takes its cue from
investors and managers that have a "functional fixation" for earnings, eps,
EBITDA, and P/E ratios --- when in fact those metrics are no longer defined by
the FASB/IASB and may have a lot of misleading noise and secret manipulations.
"The EBITDA Epidemic Takes Its Cue from Standard Setters," by Tom
Selling, The Accounting Onion, October 13, 2013 ---
http://accountingonion.com/2013/10/the-ebitda-epidemic-takes-its-cue-from-standard-setters.html
Jensen Comment
If the FASB cannot define net earnings then it follows from cold logic that they
cannot define measures derived from net earnings like EBITDA.
However, virtually all private sector business firms compute net earnings and
some measures derived from net earnings like eps, EBITDA, and P/E ratios.
It's doubtful whether net earnings for two different companies or even one
company over two time intervals are really comparable.
But all that does not matter when it comes to adjudicating an insider trading
case in court even if the accused may not really be an insider.
I'm reminded of why billionaire Martha Stewart went to prison because she
acted on inside information about a company --- inside information passed on to
her by the CEO of that company. It doesn't matter that the amount of loss saved
by the inside tip involved is insignificant compared to her billion-dollar
portfolio. Evidence in the case made it clear that she did exploit other
investors by acting on the inside tip no matter how insignificant the value of
that tip to her. She was hauled off the clink in handcuffs and was released in
less than five months. But her good name and reputation were tarnished forever
---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martha_Stewart
Mark Cuban ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Cuban
Flamboyant billionaire Mark Cuban is now in trial for very similar reasons,
although the alleged insider tip and the value of the alleged tip is more
obscure than in the Martha Stewart case. Like in the case of Martha Stewart the
loss avoided is pocket change ($750,000) relative to Cuban's billion-dollar
portfolio.
In the case of Martha Stewart the prosecution had her dead to rights in terms
of timing of the tip and her stock sales. In the case of Mark Cuban the SEC's
case is based upon an "unreliable witness who refused to testify in person."
http://www.ottawacitizen.com/business/Lawyers+Mark+Cuban+begin+closing+arguments+billionaires/9038098/story.html
"An Accounting Lesson for Twitter," by Jonathan Weil, Bloomberg
Businessweek, October 14, 2013 ---
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-10-04/an-accounting-lesson-for-twitter-.html
Accounting History Corner
"SPROUSE’S WHAT-YOU-MAY-CALL-ITS: FUNDAMENTAL INSIGHT OR MONUMENTAL MISTAKE?"
by Sudipta Basu and Gegory B. Waymire
Accounting Historians Journal, 2010, Vol. 37, no. 1 ---
http://umiss.lib.olemiss.edu:82/articles/1038402.7233/1.PDF
Hi Glen,
I have some troubles with the link as well. For me, the PDF will run in
my Windows 7 laptop but not my newer Windows 10 laptop, although this
morning the link I gave you is not working on either laptop.
It may be that you have to route to the article as described below.
Try going to
http://www.olemiss.edu/depts/general_library/dac/files/ahj.html
Then scroll down to 2010 Volume 37 Number 1 and click on the line that
says to View Searchable PDF Text File
Then scroll down to the article page numbers may not exactly coincide with
the table of contents depending upon the resolution of your browser.
Abstract
We critically evaluate Sprouse’s 1966 Journal of Accountancyarticle, which
prodded the FASB towards a balance-sheet approach. We highlight three errors
in this article.
First,
Sprouse confuses necessary and sufficient conditions by arguing that
good accounting systems must satisfy the balance-sheet equation.
Second, Sprouse’s insinuation that financial analysts rely on
balance-sheet analysis is contradicted by contemporary and current
security-analysis textbooks, analysts’ written reports, and interviews
with analysts. Third,
and most crucially, Sprouse does not recognize that the primary role
of accounting systems is to help managers discover and exploit profit
able exchange opportunities, without which firms cannot survive
CONCLUDING OBSERVATIONS ON THE LEGACY OF THE
ASSET-LIABILITY APPROACH
Sprouse [1966] is important neither because of its
conceptual insights nor because of its unpersuasive evidence. Rather, the
article matters mainly because it shaped the FASB’s rhetoric and subsequent
standard-setting approach and today’s international standard-setting agenda.
Sprouse’s misinterpretation of Graham and Dodd’s Security Analysis
foreshadows the FASB and IASB misinterpretation of Hicks [1939]. Sprouse and
the two Boards are equally culpable in ignoring actual security-analyst
behavior when advocating their preferences, relying instead on made-up
“users” [Young 2006]. Thus, the current FASB/IASB Conceptual Framework [FASB,
2006] is justifiably seen as a direct descen dant of Sprouse [1966].
Sprouse and the two Boards ignore the implications
(or are unaware) of one of the major stylized facts of U.S. financial
reporting history – the shift from a balance-sheet approach to an
income-statement approach during 1900-1930. The shift to an income-statement
approach is usually attributed to the information needs of a massive influx
of individual investors into U.S. equity markets during this era [e.g.,
Hendriksen, 1970, pp. 51-55]. If individual equity investors are
primarily interested in balance-sheet information, then this shift should
not have occurred when it did. Sprouse and the two Boards never address this
salient historical evidence that contradicts their core as assumption of
investor information needs. More broadly, Sprouse and the two Boards ignore
the historical development of the revenue-expense approach, both in theory
and practice, which we survey in this paper. If financial accounting has
emerged over many generations to maintain consilience with the biologically
evolved human brain [Dickhaut et al., 2010], then an abrupt change to a
fair-value-based, asset-liability approach might well make financial reports
less useful to actual human readers.
Contrary to theoretical ruminations of Sprouse,
security analysts to this day rely primarily on earnings forecasts in
valuing firms. However, today’s analysts can construct their earnings
forecasts only after adjusting for many more non-recurring items that the
FASB has introduced into the income statement. Although SFAS 130 [FASB,
1997] introduced a broader, comprehensive income concept that includes even
more non-recurring items, analysts show no interest in forecasting it or
using it in their analyses. We believe that the FASB’s shift in focus to the
balance sheet has created bigger problems than merely whether financial
analysts have to adjust for new income statement “thingamajigs” instead of
balance sheet “what-you-may-call-its.”
We claim that the lack of analyst interest in the
FASB-mandated, non-recurring items is symptomatic of a monumental mistake in
the asset-liability approach; specifically, it is misaligned with the
reasons that firms exist and the resulting demand for causaldouble-entry
accounting as an economic institution. In other words, while the
asset-liability approach is constructively rational, i.e. deduced from
assumptions that work in a theoretical model, it is unlikely to be
ecologically rational in the sense of improving firms’ survival prospects in
the complex real world [Sargent, 2008; Smith, 2008].
What Cuban failed to mention to the jury is that net earnings and EBITDA
cannot be defined since the FASB elected to give the balance sheet priority over
the income statement in financial reporting ---
"The Asset-Liability Approach: Primacy does not mean Priority,"
by Robert Bloomfield, FASRI Financial Accounting Standards Research
Initiative, October 6, 2009 ---
http://www.fasri.net/index.php/2009/10/the-asset-liability-approach-primacy-does-not-mean-priority/
"Whither the Concept of Income?" by Shizuki Saito University of Tokyo
and Yoshitaka Fukui Aoyama Gakuin University, SSRN, May 17, 2015 ---
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2607234
Abstract:
Since the 1970s, the decision-usefulness has taken center stage and our
attention has been concentrated on valuation of assets and liabilities
instead of income measurement. The concept of income, once considered the
gravitational center of accounting has lost its primacy and become a
byproduct of the balance sheet derived from the measurement of assets and
liabilities.
However, we have not been equipped with robust
conceptual foundation supporting theoretically reasoned accounting
measurement. It is not only theoretically but also practically important to
renew our seemingly waned interest in the concept of income because ongoing
reforms of accounting standards cannot be successfully implemented without a
sound understanding of the concept of income.
Jensen Comment
Worth and value can be defined in various ways depending a lot upon how
intangibles are valued relative to tangible assets and whether the valuation is
based upon aggregation of values of net assets versus stock market valuation of
equity shares. Certainly Walmart is worth a lot more than Amazon in terms of
tangible assets like stores, warehouses, and delivery trucks. Amazon is now
worth slightly more in terms of stock market valuation of equity shares that are
based on a whole lot of technology intangibles in the case of Amazon.
Walmart employs many more workers, and this carries with it a lot of unbooked
financial obligations for such things as future payroll and employee benefit
costs, especially medical insurance costs. Add to this the constant costs
of labor disputes and costs of fending off unions. Walmart also has much higher
inventory costs since Amazon tends to pass many inventory costs upstream
to suppliers. Amazon has more robotics and is positioned for replacement of
labor with even more robotics and other technologies.
Amazon is more vulnerable to risks of outsourcing such as the risks supplier
pricing disputes and labor disputes in UPS/USPS and price gouging by UPS or the
USPS. My point is that a whole lot of important
risks in Amazon's operations are outside the control of Amazon due to
outsourcing.
Our current managerial accounting courses and textbooks do a poor job of
analyzing financial risks when comparing companies like Amazon versus Walmart.
Hi Marc,
This does not operationally define how Net Earnings differs
from "Other Comprehensive Income." For example, some revenue and expense
items go to OCI and not net earnings whereas others go to net earnings and
not OCI.
Net earnings are derived from "revenues, expenses, gains and
loses."
OCI is derived in large part is derived from "revenues,
expenses, gains and loses."
The concept of "net earnings" in the CF will have to be more
precise on on how the partitions of are defined for
"revenues, expenses, gains and loses." It's impossible to put those
partitioning rules into concise definitions.
More problematic is that those partitions are often subjective and/or
arbitrary such as the subjective partition between a gain on an interest
rate swap is "effective" and goes into OCI versus what part is "ineffective"
and goes into "Net Earnings."
"Whither the Concept of Income?" by Shizuki Saito University of Tokyo
and Yoshitaka Fukui Aoyama Gakuin University, SSRN, May 17, 2015 ---
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2607234
Abstract:
Since the 1970s, the decision-usefulness has taken center stage and our
attention has been concentrated on valuation of assets and liabilities
instead of income measurement. The concept of income, once considered the
gravitational center of accounting has lost its primacy and become a
byproduct of the balance sheet derived from the measurement of assets and
liabilities.
However, we have not been equipped with robust
conceptual foundation supporting theoretically reasoned accounting
measurement. It is not only theoretically but also practically important to
renew our seemingly waned interest in the concept of income because ongoing
reforms of accounting standards cannot be successfully implemented without a
sound understanding of the concept of income.
Be that as it may, net earnings and EBITDA are all-important because
investors change their portfolios based on net earnings and its derivatives more
than anything in the balance sheet.
"Accounting Alchemy," by Robert E. Verrecchia, Accounting Horizons,
September 2013, pp. 603-618.
Verrecchia alleges that it's not that managers have a functional fixation for
earnings metrics as it is that they believe that other managers and investors
are so fixated with earnings that it because of monumental importance not
because it is inherently a great metric but because they believe deeply that the
market itself makes this index of vital importance.
. . .
In summary, my thesis is that managers project that
others are fixated on earnings—independent of any evidence in support
of, or contrary to, this phenomenon. This leads to managers resisting the
inclusion in earnings items that fail to enhance performance, such as the
amortization of Goodwill, or measures that make future performance more
volatile, such as those based on fair value. In the absence of acknowledging
PEF and attempting to grapple with it, I continue to see confrontations over
accounting regulation along the lines of recent debates about fair value
accounting, in addition to further impediments along the path to greater
transparency in financial statements.
It's a bit like requiring calculus for undergraduate accounting courses.
Calculus probably is not essential in any undergraduate accounting course in the
curriculum, but faculty are fixated that the best accounting majors are the ones
do well in calculus. Similarly, investors change their portfolios based on
earnings, eps, EBITDA, and P/E ratios when in fact those metrics are not defined
and may have a lot of misleading noise and secret manipulation
"
Can
corporate accounting ever be reformed?" by
Eleanor Bloxham, Fortune, July 13, 2015 ---
http://fortune.com/2015/07/13/accounting-reform/
Getting accountants and auditors to follow the
rules, as well as their spirit, isn’t easy—keeping them honest has been an
uphill battle for going on 80 years.
In a
Fortune article three weeks ago, former SEC
Chief Accountant Lynn Turner told me that the current accounting and
auditing systems we all rely on need wholesale reform.
Since then, there has been a flurry of activity
from regulators, who have issued proposals to shore up weaknesses in U.S.
corporate accounting and auditing. The Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC) issued a concept release on potential new audit committee disclosures,
including possible new requirements for information about how the audit
committee actually oversees the company’s auditor. And the Public Company
Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB) issued two new proposals. One could
require disclosure of the partner and others involved in a company audit.
The second relates to the potential creation and disclosure of what the
PCAOB calls “measures that may provide new insights into audit quality.”
Since audits have been required of public companies
for 80 years, you’d think that measures of audit quality would already be
clear, well established, and tracked. So why is this just now in the works?
Given the choice between the stricter accountability of clear metrics and
the greater freedom of none, companies, their auditors, and regulators have
chosen flexibility.
Coninued in article
"Financial Engineering and the Arms Race Between Accounting Standard Setters
and Preparers," by Ronald A. Dye, Jonathan C. Glover, and Shyam
Sunder, Accounting Horizons, Volume 29, Issue 2 (June 2015) ---
http://aaapubs.org/doi/full/10.2308/acch-50992
This article is free only to AAA members.
Abstract
This essay analyzes some problems that accounting standard setters confront
in erecting barriers to managers bent on boosting their firms' financial
reports through financial engineering (FE) activities. It also poses some
unsolved research questions regarding interactions between preparers and
standard setters. It starts by discussing the history of lease accounting to
illustrate the institutional disadvantage of standard setters relative to
preparers in their speeds of response. Then, the essay presents a general
theorem that shows that, independent of how accounting standards are
written, it is impossible to eliminate all FE efforts of preparers. It also
discusses the desirability of choosing accounting standards on the basis of
the FE efforts the standards induce preparers to engage in. Then, the essay
turns to accounting boards' concepts statements; it points out that no
concept statement recognizes the general lack of goal congruence between
preparers and standard setters in their desires to produce informative
financial statements. We also point out the relative lack of concern in
recent concept statements for the representational faithfulness of the
financial reporting of transactions. The essay asserts that these oversights
may be responsible, in part, for standard setters promulgating recent
standards that result in difficult-to-audit financial reports. The essay
also discusses factors other than accounting standards that contribute to
FE, including the high-powered incentives of managers, the limited
disclosures and/or information sources outside the face of firms' financial
statements about a firm's FE efforts, firms' principal sources of financing,
the increasing complexity of transactions, the difficulties in auditing
certain transactions, and the roles of the courts and culture. The essay
ends by proposing some other recommendations on how standards can be written
to reduce FE.
Jensen Comment
The analytics of this Accounting Horizons article, rooted heavily in
Blackwell's Theorem, add academic elegance to the accountics science of the
article but do not carry over well in the real world --- largely because of the
limiting Plato's Cave assumptions of Blackwell's Theorem, However, the article
lives up to the fine academic reputations of its authors in other respects that
make it important to consider when pitting financial engineering against
regulation.
What needs to be extended is how financial engineering is not something that can
be reduced per se. Changes in regulation are more apt to impact some
firms positively (i.e., opportunity) and other firms negatively (i.e.,
cost) simultaneously. And there are always considerations of direct impacts
versus externalities. For example, eliminating coal as an energy source cleans
the air and water but puts generations of miners and entire towns out of work as
well as increasing the cost of electric power.
The FASB requirement to book employee stock options when vested makes
employee compensation more transparent to investors while making startups more
costly to operate. And with each significant increase in financial reporting and
compliance regulations businesses are increasingly mummified in red tape. As the
saying goes: "The road to Hell is paved with good intentions."
The above article features lease accounting standards but ignores the positives
and negatives of alternative details in setting such standards and the virtual
impossibility of reliably measuring some liabilities such as estimating
operating lease renewals ad infinitum.
Accounting History Corner
"SPROUSE’S WHAT-YOU-MAY-CALL-ITS: FUNDAMENTAL INSIGHT OR MONUMENTAL MISTAKE?"
by Sudipta Basu and Gegory B. Waymire
Accounting Historians Journal, 2010, Vol. 37, no. 1 ---
http://umiss.lib.olemiss.edu:82/articles/1038402.7233/1.PDF
Hi Glen,
I have some troubles with the link as well. For me, the PDF will run in
my Windows 7 laptop but not my newer Windows 10 laptop, although this
morning the link I gave you is not working on either laptop.
It may be that you have to route to the article as described below.
Try going to
http://www.olemiss.edu/depts/general_library/dac/files/ahj.html
Then scroll down to 2010 Volume 37 Number 1 and click on the line that
says to View Searchable PDF Text File
Then scroll down to the article page numbers may not exactly coincide with
the table of contents depending upon the resolution of your browser.
Abstract
We critically evaluate Sprouse’s 1966 Journal of Accountancyarticle, which
prodded the FASB towards a balance-sheet approach. We highlight three errors
in this article.
First,
Sprouse confuses necessary and sufficient conditions by arguing that
good accounting systems must satisfy the balance-sheet equation.
Second, Sprouse’s insinuation that financial analysts rely on
balance-sheet analysis is contradicted by contemporary and current
security-analysis textbooks, analysts’ written reports, and interviews
with analysts. Third,
and most crucially, Sprouse does not recognize that the primary role
of accounting systems is to help managers discover and exploit profit
able exchange opportunities, without which firms cannot survive
CONCLUDING OBSERVATIONS ON THE LEGACY OF THE
ASSET-LIABILITY APPROACH
Sprouse [1966] is important neither because of its
conceptual insights nor because of its unpersuasive evidence. Rather, the
article matters mainly because it shaped the FASB’s rhetoric and subsequent
standard-setting approach and today’s international standard-setting agenda.
Sprouse’s misinterpretation of Graham and Dodd’s Security Analysis
foreshadows the FASB and IASB misinterpretation of Hicks [1939]. Sprouse and
the two Boards are equally culpable in ignoring actual security-analyst
behavior when advocating their preferences, relying instead on made-up
“users” [Young 2006]. Thus, the current FASB/IASB Conceptual Framework [FASB,
2006] is justifiably seen as a direct descen dant of Sprouse [1966].
Sprouse and the two Boards ignore the implications
(or are unaware) of one of the major stylized facts of U.S. financial
reporting history – the shift from a balance-sheet approach to an
income-statement approach during 1900-1930. The shift to an income-statement
approach is usually attributed to the information needs of a massive influx
of individual investors into U.S. equity markets during this era [e.g.,
Hendriksen, 1970, pp. 51-55]. If individual equity investors are
primarily interested in balance-sheet information, then this shift should
not have occurred when it did. Sprouse and the two Boards never address this
salient historical evidence that contradicts their core as assumption of
investor information needs. More broadly, Sprouse and the two Boards ignore
the historical development of the revenue-expense approach, both in theory
and practice, which we survey in this paper. If financial accounting has
emerged over many generations to maintain consilience with the biologically
evolved human brain [Dickhaut et al., 2010], then an abrupt change to a
fair-value-based, asset-liability approach might well make financial reports
less useful to actual human readers.
Contrary to theoretical ruminations of Sprouse,
security analysts to this day rely primarily on earnings forecasts in
valuing firms. However, today’s analysts can construct their earnings
forecasts only after adjusting for many more non-recurring items that the
FASB has introduced into the income statement. Although SFAS 130 [FASB,
1997] introduced a broader, comprehensive income concept that includes even
more non-recurring items, analysts show no interest in forecasting it or
using it in their analyses. We believe that the FASB’s shift in focus to the
balance sheet has created bigger problems than merely whether financial
analysts have to adjust for new income statement “thingamajigs” instead of
balance sheet “what-you-may-call-its.”
We claim that the lack of analyst interest in the
FASB-mandated, non-recurring items is symptomatic of a monumental mistake in
the asset-liability approach; specifically, it is misaligned with the
reasons that firms exist and the resulting demand for causaldouble-entry
accounting as an economic institution. In other words, while the
asset-liability approach is constructively rational, i.e. deduced from
assumptions that work in a theoretical model, it is unlikely to be
ecologically rational in the sense of improving firms’ survival prospects in
the complex real world [Sargent, 2008; Smith, 2008].
Net earnings and EBITDA cannot be defined since
the FASB and IASB elected to give the balance sheet priority over the income
statement in financial reporting ---
"The Asset-Liability Approach: Primacy does not mean Priority,"
by Robert Bloomfield, FASRI Financial Accounting Standards Research
Initiative, October 6, 2009 ---
http://www.fasri.net/index.php/2009/10/the-asset-liability-approach-primacy-does-not-mean-priority/
"Whither the Concept of Income?" by Shizuki Saito University of Tokyo
and Yoshitaka Fukui Aoyama Gakuin University, SSRN, May 17, 2015 ---
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2607234
Abstract:
Since the 1970s, the decision-usefulness has taken center stage and our
attention has been concentrated on valuation of assets and liabilities
instead of income measurement. The concept of income, once considered the
gravitational center of accounting has lost its primacy and become a
byproduct of the balance sheet derived from the measurement of assets and
liabilities.
However, we have not been equipped with robust
conceptual foundation supporting theoretically reasoned accounting
measurement. It is not only theoretically but also practically important to
renew our seemingly waned interest in the concept of income because ongoing
reforms of accounting standards cannot be successfully implemented without a
sound understanding of the concept of income.
From the CFO Journal's Morning Ledger on July 24, 2015
Amazon posts surprising profit
http://www.wsj.com/articles/amazon-posts-surprising-profit-1437682791?mod=djemCFO_h
For just the second time, Amazon.com
Inc. shared sales figures
Thursday for its cloud-computing division
Thursday. Amazon Web Services sales rose to $1.82 billion from $1 billion a
year earlier, and operating profit increased to $391 million from $77
million. Some believe the unit could operate on a stand-alone basis and,
because of its growth, is a primary reason to invest in Amazon. Amazon
posted a profit of $92 million for the third quarter, helped by sales which
rose a better-than-expected 20% to $23.18 billion.
United, Southwest post record profits
http://www.wsj.com/articles/united-southwest-post-record-profits-1437689970?mod=djemCFO_h
Two of the biggest U.S. airlines reported record
profits for the second quarter but said they planned to reduce expansion
plans for later this year, as demand has weakened.
Jensen Comment
"Surprising profits" and "record profits" make us wish that someday the
accounting standard setters (think FASB and IASB) would someday be able to
operationally define "profit" and make "profit" measures more comparable between
business firms.
Net earnings and EBITDA are all-important because
investors change their portfolios based on net earnings and its derivatives more
than anything in the balance sheet.
"Accounting Alchemy," by Robert E. Verrecchia, Accounting Horizons,
September 2013, pp. 603-618.
Verrecchia alleges that it's not that managers have a functional fixation for
earnings metrics as it is that they believe that other managers and investors
are so fixated with earnings that it because of monumental importance not
because it is inherently a great metric but because they believe deeply that the
market itself makes this index of vital importance.
. . .
In summary, my thesis is that managers project that
others are fixated on earnings—independent of any evidence in support
of, or contrary to, this phenomenon. This leads to managers resisting the
inclusion in earnings items that fail to enhance performance, such as the
amortization of Goodwill, or measures that make future performance more
volatile, such as those based on fair value. In the absence of acknowledging
PEF and attempting to grapple with it, I continue to see confrontations over
accounting regulation along the lines of recent debates about fair value
accounting, in addition to further impediments along the path to greater
transparency in financial statements.
Investors change their portfolios based on
earnings, eps, EBITDA, and P/E ratios when in fact those metrics are not defined
and may have a lot of misleading noise and secret manipulation
Bob Jensen's threads on the differences between IASB versus FASB standards
---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#MethodsForSetting
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting theory can be found at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm
Possible Teaching Case
Question
If you presented the following article in class how would you approach the
analysis of this article and/or evaluate student reactions to this article?
Considerations
First consider the fact that neither the FASB nor the IASB has a working
definition of net earnings, and it's quite dangerous to compare earnings numbers
of a company over time.
Second consider the classical debate over whether accrual financial
statements or cash flow financial statements are more important when analyzing
the future of a company --- realizing that both may be important at the same
time.
Third consider any problems of revenue recognition and unrealized fair value
changes that may or may not be factors in these particular Twitter financial
statements.
"Why This Twitter Earnings Report Matters So Much," by Jon C. Ogg,
24/7 Wall Street, July 28, 2014 ---
Click Here
http://247wallst.com/technology-3/2014/07/28/why-this-twitter-earnings-report-matters-so-much/?utm_source=247WallStDailyNewsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_content=JULY292014A&utm_campaign=DailyNewsletter
Twitter, Inc. (NYSE: TWTR) is set to report its
second quarter earnings report after the close of trading on Tuesday. This
will be just the second full quarter earnings report since its late 2013
initial public offering.
24/7 Wall St. has seen that the Thomson Reuters
estimate is for a loss of one-cent per share on revenues of $283 million.
Management had guided in a range of $270 to $180 million. New advertising is
said to be continuing to let the company grow, but we are also looking at
that user growth closely and the internal ad metrics rather than just the
raw revenue number.
We would caution that 2013 revenue was $664.89
million, up almost 110% from the $316.93 million in 2012. Revenue growth is
expected to slow ahead – with 90% growth to $1.27 billion in 2014 and with
revenue growth of another 62% to $2.06 billion in 2015. This is still
massive growth expected, but many
investors
remain mixed to uncertain about Twitter and its
endless growth.
On top of revenue growth, we will again be looking
closely at user growth. This should be up somewhere close to around 6% again
to around 270 million users, although the fair range might be 265 million to
275 million.
The number is too wild to calculate for an
earnings multiple for 2014, but even
after losing half of its post-IPO peak value Twitter still trades above
140-times expected 2015 earnings per share. It is also trading at a multiple
of almost 11-times expected 2015 revenues.
We have long wondered how investors will continue
to treat social media stocks in the years ahead. At some point there will
either be a split where social media takes over or there will be user
fatigue. That verdict remains out.
Twitter shares were above $38 on Monday in
afternoon trading. Its 52-week
trading
range
is $29.51 to $74.73, and the consensus analyst price target is almost
$43.50.
It almost feels like a conundrum for Twitter
investors. The stock has lost half of its peak value, but it likely still
has to post very strong numbers to keep investors happy. Having a
market
cap of $22.25 billion in revenues
comes with high expectations, and disappointing on those expectations could
come with serious consequences.
These were the metrics posted in the first quarter
of 2014, verbatim from Twitter’s release:
- Average Monthly Active Users (MAUs)
were 255 million as of March 31, 2014, an increase of 25%
year-over-year.
- Mobile MAUs reached
198 million in the first quarter of 2014, an increase of 31%
year-over-year, representing 78% of total MAUs.
- Timeline views reached 157 billion for
the first quarter of 2014, an increase of 15% year-over-year.
- Advertising revenue per thousand
timeline views reached $1.44 in the first quarter of 2014, an increase
of 96% year-over-year.
References:
"Twitter's Recent 8-K Begs for More Transparency," by Anthony H.
Catanach, Grumpy Old Accountants, February 2014 ---
,
http://grumpyoldaccountants.com/blog/2014/2/16/twitters-recent-8-k-begs-for-more-transparency
On the AECM Tom Selling was not so much
concerned about the insider trading issue as he his with Mark Cuban's EBITDA
lecture to the jury
"An Accounting Lesson for Twitter," by Jonathan Weil, Bloomberg
Businessweek, October 14, 2013 ---
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-10-04/an-accounting-lesson-for-twitter-.html
What Cuban failed to mention is that net earnings and EBITDA cannot be
defined since the FASB elected to give the balance sheet priority over the
income statement in financial reporting ---
"The Asset-Liability Approach: Primacy does not mean Priority,"
by Robert Bloomfield, FASRI Financial Accounting Standards Research
Initiative, October 6, 2009 ---
http://www.fasri.net/index.php/2009/10/the-asset-liability-approach-primacy-does-not-mean-priority/
"Whither the Concept of Income?" by Shizuki Saito University of Tokyo
and Yoshitaka Fukui Aoyama Gakuin University, SSRN, May 17, 2015 ---
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2607234
Abstract:
Since the 1970s, the decision-usefulness has taken center stage and our
attention has been concentrated on valuation of assets and liabilities
instead of income measurement. The concept of income, once considered the
gravitational center of accounting has lost its primacy and become a
byproduct of the balance sheet derived from the measurement of assets and
liabilities.
However, we have not been equipped with robust
conceptual foundation supporting theoretically reasoned accounting
measurement. It is not only theoretically but also practically important to
renew our seemingly waned interest in the concept of income because ongoing
reforms of accounting standards cannot be successfully implemented without a
sound understanding of the concept of income.
Be that as it may, net earnings and EBITDA are all-important because
investors change their portfolios based on net earnings and its derivatives more
than anything in the balance sheet.
"Accounting Alchemy," by Robert E. Verrecchia, Accounting Horizons,
September 2013, pp. 603-618.
Verrecchia alleges that it's not that managers have a functional fixation for
earnings metrics as it is that they believe that other managers and investors
are so fixated with earnings that it because of monumental importance not
because it is inherently a great metric but because they believe deeply that the
market itself makes this index of vital importance.
. . .
In summary, my thesis is that managers project that
others are fixated on earnings—independent of any evidence in support
of, or contrary to, this phenomenon. This leads to managers resisting the
inclusion in earnings items that fail to enhance performance, such as the
amortization of Goodwill, or measures that make future performance more
volatile, such as those based on fair value. In the absence of acknowledging
PEF and attempting to grapple with it, I continue to see confrontations over
accounting regulation along the lines of recent debates about fair value
accounting, in addition to further impediments along the path to greater
transparency in financial statements.
It's a bit like requiring calculus for undergraduate accounting courses.
Calculus probably is not essential in any undergraduate accounting course in the
curriculum, but faculty are fixated that the best accounting majors are the ones
do well in calculus. Similarly, investors change their portfolios based on
earnings, eps, EBITDA, and P/E ratios when in fact those metrics are not defined
and may have a lot of misleading noise and secret manipulation
Be that as it may, net earnings and EBITDA are all-important because
investors change their portfolios based on net earnings and its derivatives more
than anything in the balance sheet.
"Accounting Alchemy," by Robert E. Verrecchia, Accounting Horizons,
September 2013, pp. 603-618.
Verrecchia alleges that it's not that managers have a functional fixation for
earnings metrics as it is that they believe that other managers and investors
are so fixated with earnings that it because of monumental importance not
because it is inherently a great metric but because they believe deeply that the
market itself makes this index of vital importance.
. . .
In summary, my thesis is that managers project that
others are fixated on earnings—independent of any evidence in support
of, or contrary to, this phenomenon. This leads to managers resisting the
inclusion in earnings items that fail to enhance performance, such as the
amortization of Goodwill, or measures that make future performance more
volatile, such as those based on fair value. In the absence of acknowledging
PEF and attempting to grapple with it, I continue to see confrontations over
accounting regulation along the lines of recent debates about fair value
accounting, in addition to further impediments along the path to greater
transparency in financial statements.
It's a bit like requiring calculus for undergraduate accounting courses.
Calculus probably is not essential in any undergraduate accounting course in the
curriculum, but faculty are fixated that the best accounting majors are the ones
do well in calculus. Similarly, investors change their portfolios based on
earnings, eps, EBITDA, and P/E ratios when in fact those metrics are not defined
and may have a lot of misleading noise and secret manipulations.
In any case, see what Tom has to say at
http://accountingonion.com/2013/10/the-ebitda-epidemic-takes-its-cue-from-standard-setters.html
Net Earnings Functional Fixation?
From the 24/7 Wall Street newsletter on October 28, 2013
Earnings season is in full swing and this coming
week will bring many key earnings reports. This will also be the last week
of major on-calendar earnings for the third quarter, even if important
earnings will still be coming out in the next two weeks or three weeks. 24/7
Wall St. has decided to publish previews for what it feels are the ten most
important earnings reports on the calendar for the week ahead. While these
may be market movers in their own right, they are definitely all sector
movers.
These are the 10 most important earnings in the week ahead.
Alas!
Net earnings is the most important number reported in financial statements and
sadly accounting standard setters like the IASB and FASB can no longer even
define what net earnings or any derivatives of mean ---
http://www.fasri.net/index.php/2009/10/the-asset-liability-approach-primacy-does-not-mean-priority/
Accounting theorists who sometimes argue that earnings numbers between firms
or even over time with within a firm are misleading and should not be compared.
Why then do earnings numbers and derivatives like earnings-per-share and P/E
ratios dominate the analyses of both investors and financial analysts?
Accounting theorists scramble to explain why business firms that cook the
books often do so to creatively manage their earnings numbers ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory02.htm#Manipulation
"Accounting Alchemy," by Robert E. Verrecchia, Accounting Horizons,
September 2013, pp. 603-618.
Verrecchia alleges that it's not that managers have a functional fixation for
earnings metrics as it is that they believe that other managers and investors
are so fixated with earnings that it because of monumental importance not
because it is inherently a great metric but because they believe deeply that the
market itself makes this index of vital importance.
. . .
In summary, my thesis is that managers project that
others are fixated on earnings—independent of any evidence in support
of, or contrary to, this phenomenon. This leads to managers resisting the
inclusion in earnings items that fail to enhance performance, such as the
amortization of Goodwill, or measures that make future performance more
volatile, such as those based on fair value. In the absence of acknowledging
PEF and attempting to grapple with it, I continue to see confrontations over
accounting regulation along the lines of recent debates about fair value
accounting, in addition to further impediments along the path to greater
transparency in financial statements.
"Investors Beware: Corporate Financial Statements Decline in Predictive
Value ," by Bill Snyder, Stanford Graduate School of Business, March 22,
2013 ---
Click Here
http://www.gsb.stanford.edu/news/research/investors-beware-corporate-financial-statements-decline-predictive-value?utm_source=Stanford+Business+Re%3AThink&utm_campaign=eeb27543e5-Stanford_Business_Re_Think_Issue_Ten3_22_2013&utm_medium=email&ct=t%28Stanford_Business_Re_Think_Issue_Ten3_22_2013%29
Over time, financial statements of public
corporations show more losses, intangibles, and earnings restatements, which
lower their value for predicting corporate bankruptcies.
Corporate bankruptcies, like earthquakes, are rare
events. But when they do occur, says
Maureen
F. McNichols of Stanford's Graduate School of
Business, the results can be financially devastating for investors and other
stakeholders.
An important role of financial statement
information is to permit investors to assess the likely timing and amount of
future cash flows. Recent research by McNichols and coauthors examines the
usefulness of financial statement and market data for investors who want to
ascertain the likelihood of bankruptcy. The results of that research are not
completely reassuring.
The authors — McNichols, Marriner S. Eccles
Professor of Public and Private Management;
William
H. Beaver, Joan E. Horngren Professor of
Accounting, Emeritus, at the Graduate School of Business; and
Maria Correia,
assistant professor of accounting at the London Business School — examined
40 years of financial data garnered from thousands of public corporations.
They analyzed key financial ratios, such as return on assets and leverage,
reported in filings to the
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, and market-related data such as
market capitalization and stock returns. Over the period they examined —
1962 to 2002 — the data became significantly less useful in predicting
bankruptcy. "Investors should be concerned and aware of this when they
assess bankruptcy risk," McNichols says.
A professor of accounting, McNichols is quick to add that financial
statement data are still highly relevant. Of the firms she and her
colleagues studied, about 1% fell into bankruptcy, and despite the
deterioration in financial-statement usefulness, financial ratios and market
data are still important tools for predicting insolvency, she says.
Nonetheless, the results are concerning enough that McNichols believes
that regulators and standards setters such as the U.S. Securities and
Exchange Commission and the
Financial Accounting
Standards Board should be aware of this issue.
Three major factors muddy the waters for investors
attempting to predict bankruptcy, the researchers found:
- Over the sample period, there is increasing
evidence that management exercises discretion over financial reporting,
and that there have been increasing numbers of restatements because the
financial statements were materially misleading. "Our findings indicate
that the manipulation of reported results gives a misleading impression
of profitability and reduces investors' ability to predict bankruptcy,"
notes Correia. For example, firms recognizing revenue ahead of schedule
or fraudulently may appear profitable. As a result, the bankruptcy
prediction model is much less likely to classify bankrupt firms that
also restated earnings accurately, assigning lower risk due to their
overstated earnings.
- Many firms, particularly the technology
companies listed on the
NASDAQ exchange,
are heavy spenders on research and development. R&D in itself is
certainly not a cause for concern, but because this "intangible" is not
recognized on the balance sheet, it makes various financial ratios and
data less useful.
- The frequency of firms reporting losses has
increased substantially over the past 40 years. Because predicting
future earnings for firms that suffer losses involves substantially
greater uncertainty than for firms that are profitable, the bankruptcy
prediction model is less likely to accurately classify loss firms that
will go bankrupt.
Consider a firm that suffers a loss. The fact that
it has lost money is obviously not good news, but in and of itself a loss
doesn't mean a company will go bankrupt. Losses complicate the financial
picture, the researchers found, because while firms reporting a loss are
more likely to go bankrupt on average, it is harder to predict which loss
firms will do so relative to firms earning a profit.
Continued in article
Jensen Comment
Until the 1990s net earnings showed a surprising predictive power in empirical
capital market studies. I say "surprising" in the sense that we all knew
historical cost earnings based upon many arbitrary assumptions in accrual
accounting such as depreciation, amortization, and bad debt estimation.
Although net earnings was never defined very well in the old days, the FASB
and IASB pretty well destroyed any remaining definition as fair value
accounting, goodwill impairment, and many other components of earnings took away
any remaining meaning of bottom-line net earnings. The biggest bomb, in my
opinion, was the combining of unrealized fair value changes with realized
revenues on contracts.
Solution 1
There are two solutions in my viewpoint. One is to require multi-column
reporting along the lines advocated in
"Academic Research and Standard-Setting: The Case of Other
Comprehensive Income," by Lynn L. Rees and Philip B. Shane, Accounting
Horizons, December 2012, Vol. 26, No. 4, pp. 789-815. ---
http://aaajournals.org/doi/full/10.2308/acch-50237
In particular note Table 2 at
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/temp/ReesShane2012Table3.jpg
Solution 2
The other solution is to stop reporting bottom line net earnings as reported in
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#ChangesOnTheWay
Solution 3
Pray hard that the IASB and FASB will one day define "net earnings" in a way
that it will have predictive value. That prayer has about as much hope as
praying for world peace or a balanced Federal Budget in Washington DC.
None of the above approaches necessarily will automatically improve the
predictive value of financial statements. Our hope is that in both solutions
financial analysts will be forced to perform deeper analysis rather than simply
track bottom line net earnings that has little, if any, predictive value after
the FASB and IASB screwed it up.
"
Ball and Brown and the Usefulness of EPS." by Robert Lipe,
FASRI, August 9, 2012 ---
http://www.fasri.net/index.php/2012/08/ball-and-brown-and-the-usefulness-of-eps/
At the AAA meeting in
DC, I attended a presidential address by Ray Ball and Phil Brown
regarding their seminal research paper (JAR 1968). They described the
motivation for their study as a test of existing scholarly research that
painted a dim picture of reported earnings. The earlier writers noted
that earnings were based on old information (historical cost) or, worse
yet, a mix of old and new information (mixed attributes). The early
articles concluded that earnings could not be informative, and therefore
major changes to accounting practice where necessary to correct the
problem.
Ball and Brown viewed
this literature as providing a testable hypothesis – market participants
should not be able to use earnings in a profitable manner. Stated
another way, knowing the amount of earnings that would be reported at
the end of the year with certainty could not be used to profitably trade
common stocks at the beginning of the year. Evidence to the contrary
would suggest the null that earnings are non-informative does not hold.
While the methods part
of the paper is probably difficult for recent accounting archivalists to
follow, Ball and Brown produce perhaps the single most famous graph in
the accounting literature. It shows stock returns trending up over the
year for companies that ultimately report increases in earnings and
trending down for companies that report decreases in earnings. Thus they
show that accounting numbers can be informative even if the aggregate
number is not computed using a single unified measurement approach
across transactions/events. Subsequent research would show that numbers
from the income statement have predictive ability for future earnings
and cash flows.
As I sat listening to
these two research icons, I could not help but think about some comments
I have heard recently from a few standard setters and practitioners.
Those individuals express contempt for EPS in a mixed attribute world.
They appear to wish they could jump in a time machine and eliminate per
share computations related to income. I readily admit that EPS does not
explain much of the variance in returns over periods of one year or less
( e.g., Lev, JAR 1989). However the link is clearly significant, and
over longer periods, the R2’s are quite high (Easton, Harris, and Ohlson,
JAE 1992). Can the standard setters make incremental improvements to
increase usefulness of EPS? I sure hope so, and maybe the recent paper
posted by Alex Milburn will help. But dismissing a reported number
because it is not derived from a single consistent measurement attribute
– be it fair value or historical cost – seems to revert back to pre-Ball
and Brown views that are rejected by years of research.
Jensen Comment
Given the balance sheet focus of the FASB and the IASB at the expense of the
income statement I don't see how net income or eps could be anything but
misleading to investors and financial analysts. The biggest hit, in my
opinion, is the way the FASB and IASB create earnings volatility not only
unrealized fair value changes but the utter fiction created by posting fair
value changes that will never ever be realized for held-to-maturity
investments and debt. This was not the case at the time of the seminal Ball
and Brown article. Those were olden days before accounting standards
injected huge doses of fair value fiction in eps numbers so beloved by
investors and analysts.
Sydney Finkelstein, the Steven Roth professor of management at the
Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth College, also pointed out that Bank of
America booked a $2.2 billion gain by increasing the value of Merrill
Lynch’s assets it acquired last quarter to prices that were higher than
Merrill kept them. “Although perfectly legal, this move is also perfectly
delusional, because some day soon these assets will be written down to their
fair value, and it won’t be pretty,” he said
"Bank Profits Appear Out of Thin Air ," by Andrew Ross
Sorkin, The New York Times, April 20, 2009 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/21/business/21sorkin.html?_r=1&dbk
This is starting to feel
like amateur hour for aspiring magicians.
Another day, another
attempt by a Wall Street bank to pull a bunny out of the hat, showing
off an earnings report that it hopes will elicit oohs and aahs from the
market. Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup and, on Monday, Bank of
America all tried to wow their audiences with what appeared to be —
presto! — better-than-expected numbers.
But in each case,
investors spotted the attempts at sleight of hand, and didn’t buy it for
a second.
With Goldman Sachs, the
disappearing month of December didn’t quite disappear (it changed its
reporting calendar, effectively erasing the impact of a $1.5 billion
loss that month); JPMorgan Chase reported a dazzling profit partly
because the price of its bonds dropped (theoretically, they could retire
them and buy them back at a cheaper price; that’s sort of like saying
you’re richer because the value of your home has dropped); Citigroup
pulled the same trick.
Bank of America sold its
shares in China Construction Bank to book a big one-time profit, but Ken
Lewis heralded the results as “a testament to the value and breadth of
the franchise.”
Sydney
Finkelstein, the Steven Roth professor of management at the Tuck School
of Business at Dartmouth College, also pointed out that Bank of America
booked a $2.2 billion gain by increasing the value of Merrill Lynch’s
assets it acquired last quarter to prices that were higher than Merrill
kept them.
“Although
perfectly legal, this move is also perfectly delusional, because some
day soon these assets will be written down to their fair value, and it
won’t be pretty,” he said.
Investors reacted by
throwing tomatoes. Bank of America’s stock plunged 24 percent, as did
other bank stocks. They’ve had enough.
Why can’t anybody read
the room here? After all the financial wizardry that got the country —
actually, the world — into trouble, why don’t these bankers give their
audience what it seems to crave? Perhaps a bit of simple math that could
fit on the back of an envelope, with no asterisks and no fine print,
might win cheers instead of jeers from the market.
What’s particularly
puzzling is why the banks don’t just try to make some money the
old-fashioned way. After all, earning it, if you could call it that, has
never been easier with a business model sponsored by the federal
government. That’s the one in which Uncle Sam and we taxpayers are
offering the banks dirt-cheap money, which they can turn around and lend
at much higher rates.
“If the federal
government let me borrow money at zero percent interest, and then lend
it out at 4 to 12 percent interest, even I could make a profit,” said
Professor Finkelstein of the Tuck School. “And if a college professor
can make money in banking in 2009, what should we expect from the highly
paid C.E.O.’s that populate corner offices?”
But maybe now the banks
are simply following the lead of Washington, which keeps trotting out
the latest idea for shoring up the financial system.
The latest big idea is
the so-called stress test that is being applied to the banks,
with results expected at the end of this month.
This is playing to a
tough crowd that long ago decided to stop suspending disbelief. If the
stress test is done honestly, it is impossible to believe that some
banks won’t fail. If no bank fails, then what’s the value of the stress
test? To tell us everything is fine, when people know it’s not?
“I can’t think of a
single, positive thing to say about the stress test concept — the
process by which it will be carried out, or outcome it will produce, no
matter what the outcome is,” Thomas K. Brown, an analyst at
Bankstocks.com, wrote. “Nothing good can come of this and, under
certain, non-far-fetched scenarios, it might end up making the banking
system’s problems worse.”
The results of the
stress test could lead to calls for capital for some of the banks. Citi
is mentioned most often as a candidate for more help, but there could be
others.
The expectation, before
Monday at least, was that the government would pump new money into the
banks that needed it most.
But that was before the
government reached into its bag of tricks again. Now Treasury, instead
of putting up new money, is considering swapping its preferred shares in
these banks for common shares.
The benefit to the bank
is that it will have more capital to meet its ratio requirements, and
therefore won’t have to pay a 5 percent dividend to the government. In
the case of Citi, that would save the bank hundreds of millions of
dollars a year.
And — ta da! — it will
miraculously stretch taxpayer dollars without spending a penny more.
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting theory ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on controversies in the setting of accounting
standards ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#MethodsForSetting
Bob Jensen's threads on controversies in the setting of accounting
standards ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/Theory01.htm#MethodsForSetting
Insider Tips by Martha Stewart, Mark Cuban, Tom Selling, and Three Bobs (Vererrecchia,
Jaedicke, and Jensen)
Jensen Comment
I don't think the "The EBITDA Epidemic Takes Its Cue from Standard Setters."
Like Professor Verrecchia currently and my accounting Professor Bob
Jaedicke decades earlier I think the "EBITDA Epidemic" takes its cue from
investors and managers that have a "functional fixation" for earnings, eps,
EBITDA, and P/E ratios --- when in fact those metrics are no longer defined by
the FASB/IASB and may have a lot of misleading noise and secret manipulations.
"The EBITDA Epidemic Takes Its Cue from Standard Setters," by Tom
Selling, The Accounting Onion, October 13, 2013 ---
http://accountingonion.com/2013/10/the-ebitda-epidemic-takes-its-cue-from-standard-setters.html
Jensen Comment
If the FASB cannot define net earnings then it follows from cold logic that they
cannot define measures derived from net earnings like EBITDA.
However, virtually all private sector business firms compute net earnings and
some measures derived from net earnings like eps, EBITDA, and P/E ratios.
It's doubtful whether net earnings for two different companies or even one
company over two time intervals are really comparable.
But all that does not matter when it comes to adjudicating an insider trading
case in court even if the accused may not really be an insider.
I'm reminded of why billionaire Martha Stewart went to prison because she
acted on inside information about a company --- inside information passed on to
her by the CEO of that company. It doesn't matter that the amount of loss saved
by the inside tip involved is insignificant compared to her billion-dollar
portfolio. Evidence in the case made it clear that she did exploit other
investors by acting on the inside tip no matter how insignificant the value of
that tip to her. She was hauled off the clink in handcuffs and was released in
less than five months. But her good name and reputation were tarnished forever
---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martha_Stewart
Mark Cuban ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Cuban
Flamboyant billionaire Mark Cuban is now in trial for very similar reasons,
although the alleged insider tip and the value of the alleged tip is more
obscure than in the Martha Stewart case. Like in the case of Martha Stewart the
loss avoided is pocket change ($750,000) relative to Cuban's billion-dollar
portfolio.
In the case of Martha Stewart the prosecution had her dead to rights in terms
of timing of the tip and her stock sales. In the case of Mark Cuban the SEC's
case is based upon an "unreliable witness who refused to testify in person."
http://www.ottawacitizen.com/business/Lawyers+Mark+Cuban+begin+closing+arguments+billionaires/9038098/story.html
Tom Selling is not so much concerned about the insider trading issue as he
his with Mark Cuban's EBITDA lecture to the jury.
"An Accounting Lesson for Twitter," by Jonathan Weil, Bloomberg
Businessweek, October 14, 2013 ---
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-10-04/an-accounting-lesson-for-twitter-.html
What Cuban failed to mention is that net earnings and EBITDA cannot be
defined since the FASB elected to give the balance sheet priority over the
income statement in financial reporting ---
"The Asset-Liability Approach: Primacy does not mean Priority,"
by Robert Bloomfield, FASRI Financial Accounting Standards Research
Initiative, October 6, 2009 ---
http://www.fasri.net/index.php/2009/10/the-asset-liability-approach-primacy-does-not-mean-priority/
"Whither the Concept of Income?" by Shizuki Saito University of Tokyo
and Yoshitaka Fukui Aoyama Gakuin University, SSRN, May 17, 2015 ---
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2607234
Abstract:
Since the 1970s, the decision-usefulness has taken center stage and our
attention has been concentrated on valuation of assets and liabilities
instead of income measurement. The concept of income, once considered the
gravitational center of accounting has lost its primacy and become a
byproduct of the balance sheet derived from the measurement of assets and
liabilities.
However, we have not been equipped with robust
conceptual foundation supporting theoretically reasoned accounting
measurement. It is not only theoretically but also practically important to
renew our seemingly waned interest in the concept of income because ongoing
reforms of accounting standards cannot be successfully implemented without a
sound understanding of the concept of income.
Be that as it may, net earnings and EBITDA are all-important because
investors change their portfolios based on net earnings and its derivatives more
than anything in the balance sheet.
"Accounting Alchemy," by Robert E. Verrecchia, Accounting Horizons,
September 2013, pp. 603-618.
Verrecchia alleges that it's not that managers have a functional fixation for
earnings metrics as it is that they believe that other managers and investors
are so fixated with earnings that it because of monumental importance not
because it is inherently a great metric but because they believe deeply that the
market itself makes this index of vital importance.
. . .
In summary, my thesis is that managers project that
others are fixated on earnings—independent of any evidence in support
of, or contrary to, this phenomenon. This leads to managers resisting the
inclusion in earnings items that fail to enhance performance, such as the
amortization of Goodwill, or measures that make future performance more
volatile, such as those based on fair value. In the absence of acknowledging
PEF and attempting to grapple with it, I continue to see confrontations over
accounting regulation along the lines of recent debates about fair value
accounting, in addition to further impediments along the path to greater
transparency in financial statements.
It's a bit like requiring calculus for undergraduate accounting courses.
Calculus probably is not essential in any undergraduate accounting course in the
curriculum, but faculty are fixated that the best accounting majors are the ones
do well in calculus. Similarly, investors change their portfolios based on
earnings, eps, EBITDA, and P/E ratios when in fact those metrics are not defined
and may have a lot of misleading noise and secret manipulations.
In any case, see what Tom has to say at
http://accountingonion.com/2013/10/the-ebitda-epidemic-takes-its-cue-from-standard-setters.html
April 3, 2013 message from Bob
Jensen
- Hi Tom,
Although I'm inclined to agree
with you about the decline in quality of financial reporting, but
I'm not as inclined to put as much blame on the accounting standards
setters. Perhaps we've just given standard setters an impossible job.
Much of the blame has to be
placed on the clients themselves along with their lawyers and
accountants who created contracts so filled with contingencies and
incomprehensible clauses that it's impossible to account for them, at
least in our overly simplistic double-entry system of accounting.
There were once thousands and
now ten thousands of types of complicated derivatives contracts,
financial structures, and collateralizations. We require accounting
systems to mark contracts to market when markets are thin and unstable
as morning dew on flower petals in a wind.
I think even you would be
overwhelmed if you were appointed to the IASB or IASB. I know that I
would be dumbfounded in less than a week.
As to externalities, I don't
think we will ever be able to measure the costs and benefits because of
the higher order interactions that befuddle even our best scientists. I
sit up here in the mountains and view first-hand what I think is global
warming. But the scientists who measure temperatures around the world
tell us that temperatures are declining rather than rising. There's ever
so much we don't understand in science, macroeconomics (where we are now
facing complexities we've never seen in the history of the world). and
financial risk contracting that the experts who write the contracts do
not understand.
We bookkeepers clomp around in
worlds where angels fear to tread. We can't even explain why financial
statements lost predictive ability since the 1970s.
Respectfully,
Bob Jensen
Review of Forecasts and Estimates
CPA Journal: Auditing Accounting Estimates ---
https://www.cpajournal.com/2019/03/07/auditing-accounting-estimates/
Jensen Comment
In 1983, nearly four decades ago if you do the math, I wrote my second
monograph published by the AAA
Review of Forecasts: Scaling and Analysis of Expert Judgments Regarding
Cross-Impacts of Assumptions of Business Forecasts and Accounting Measures,
(Sarasota, FL: American Accounting Association, 1983).
The AICPA had recently changed auditing rules allowing auditors
to "review" forecasts in the spirit of giving a new line of professional
services to auditing firms. Auditors were not to validate forecast numbers
themselves. The idea, however, was that auditors could review management
forecasts and pass judgment on the "reasonableness" of assumptions underlying
management's forecasts.
I don't think the auditing firms ever made much revenue reviewing
forecasts. Apparently clients did not see a whole lot of value added in when
paying auditing firms for a review of forecasts. One of the huge problems is
that circumstances can impact assumptions so suddenly that forecasts are much
more tenuous. Exhibit A is how Tesla's forecasted revenues and profits keep
changing almost day-to-day. One example of where an auditing firm (Price
Waterhouse) signed off on a "Review of Forecasts" is the 1987 Annual Report of
Days Inn which was then privately owned and contemplating going public. That
1987 annual report is exceptional in other regards, especially the enormous
investment Days Inn made that year to report exit values of 300+ hotels.
Increasingly, forecasts/estimates are subject to enormous and
shifting tides in multinational business and politics. Think of how hard it is
for technology giants like Google and Apple to forecast revenues and profits in
the European Union given the EU's constantly shifting regulations and tax laws.
Think of how difficult it is to forecast revenues during the pending Trump
Administration trade negotiations. Think of how difficult it is to predict the
future of banking under the threat of hostile socialist democrats winning power
of the executive and legislative branches of the Federal government. And of
course there are great unknowns about how technology will impact business firm
future (think AI, robotics, cyber warfare, etc.).
Accounting
History in a Nutshell
Humanity is forgetting its history more rapidly. And
celebrities are losing their fame faster than ever.
Marc Parry, "Scholars Elicit a
'Cultural Genome' From 5.2 Million Google-Digitized Books," Chronicle of
Higher Education, December 16, 2010 ---
http://chronicle.com/article/Scholars-Elicit-a-Cultural/125731/?sid=wc&utm_source=wc&utm_medium=en
Jensen Comment
It's ironic that the irrelevance of history in our academic disciplines is
transpiring at at time when historical works are increasingly available and
searchable at virtually zero cost. Perhaps one problem is that we're
increasingly discovering how vast the histories of our discipline have
become. Do intermediate accounting instructors even mention the works of
O'Neal, Canning, Paton, and Littleton in this century?
MAAW's
Accounting Index Updated (great accounting literature guide) ---
https://maaw.info/AccountingForArticlesByTopic.htm
Confucius is described, by Sima Qian and other sources, as having endured
a poverty-stricken and humiliating youth and been forced, upon reaching
manhood, to undertake such petty jobs as accounting and caring for
livestock.
History of Quantitative Finance
"Four features in appreciation of the life and work of Benoit Mandelbrot,"
Simoleon Sense, February 3, 2011 ---
http://www.simoleonsense.com/four-features-in-appreciation-of-the-life-and-work-of-benoit-mandelbrot/
Ages
of American Capitalism ---
https://marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2021/06/ages-of-american-capitalism.html
Jensen Comment
It would be interesting to have students compare the "ages of American
capitalism" with the increasing complexities of financial contracting and
accounting for those contracts such as the history of insurance contracting,
mezzanine contracts, and the history of derivative financial instruments as
financial risk hedges. The key was the development of markets in those more
complex contracts.
Thank you James Martin for the tremendous MAAW Accounting History
database --- http://maaw.info/
History News Network (not accounting) ---
http://hnn.us/
Archive of the History of Financial Regulation ---
http://www.sechistorical.org/
A Century of Not-for-Profit Accounting: An Historical Perspective ---
https://www.cpajournal.com/2020/12/09/a-century-of-not-for-profit-accounting/
Some Topic Summaries on MAAW (especially useful for management accounting
history research) ---
http://maaw.blogspot.com/2016/05/some-topic-summaries-on-maaw.html
An Introduction to Great Economists — Adam Smith, the Physiocrats & More —
Presented in New MOOC ---
Click Here
http://www.openculture.com/2013/05/an_introduction_to_great_economists_--_adam_smith_the_physiocrats_more_--_presented_in_new_mooc.html
Securities Exchange Commission Historical Society (SEC) ---
http://www.sechistorical.org/
The Richard C. Adkerson Gallery on the SEC Role in Accounting Standards
Setting (accounting history) ---
http://www.sechistorical.org/museum/galleries/rca/index.php
Thank you Jim McKinney for the heads up.
"The Last Half-Century of the Federal Income Tax, by Lawrence B.
Gibbs, Creighton Law Review, November 29, 2012 ---
http://taxprof.typepad.com/files/gibbs.pdf
Thank you Paul Caron for the heads up.
"A Very Short History Of Data Science," by Gil Press, Forbes, May
28, 2013 ---
Click Here
http://www.forbes.com/sites/gilpress/2013/05/28/a-very-short-history-of-data-science/?utm_campaign=techtwittersf&utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=social
From the Harvard Business School: Working Knowledge ---
http://hbswk.hbs.edu/
Topics ---
http://hbswk.hbs.edu/topics/
Accounting and Control is listed under Finance ---
http://hbswk.hbs.edu/topics/accountingandcontrol.html
Corporation ---
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corporation
A Brief History of the Corporation: 1600 to
2100 by Venkatesh Rao ---
http://www.ribbonfarm.com/2011/06/08/a-brief-history-of-the-corporation-1600-to-2100/
Links to accounting history over the same time periods --- See Below
Here's a super-short history of 2,400 years of emerging markets ---
http://www.businessinsider.com/history-of-emerging-markets-investing-2017-11
Commemorating the Fifty-Year Anniversary of
Ball and Brown (1968): The Evolution of Capital Market Research over the Past
Fifty Years
SSRN
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3417149
66 Pages Posted: 10 Jul 2019
Massachusetts Institute of
Technology (MIT) - Sloan School of Management
Simon School, University of
Rochester
Date Written: July 5, 2019
Abstract
We commemorate
the 50th anniversary of Ball and Brown [1968] by chronicling its impact on
capital market research in accounting. We trace the evolution of various
research paths that post-Ball and Brown [1968] researchers took as they sought
to build on the foundation laid by Ball and Brown [1968] to create a body of
research on the usefulness, timeliness, and other properties of accounting
numbers. We discuss how those paths often link back to the groundwork laid and
questions originally posed in Ball and Brown [1968].
Keywords: Ball and Brown, earnings, earnings-return relation, earnings
usefulness, earnings timeliness, asymmetric timeliness, conservatism,
association study, event study, information content, value relevance, positive
economics, efficient markets hypothesis, market efficiency, post-announcement
drift
JEL Classification: M41, G10, G14
Mathematical Association of America: On This Day ---
www.maa.org/news/on-this-day
The Year 1552: The First Arithmetic Book
Printed in England
Luca Pacioi ---
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luca_Pacioli
There are at least two common mistakes with respect to Luca Pacioli (a close
friend of Leonardo da Vinci). One is to assume Pacioli's famous 1494 book is
an accounting book. Pacioli only used bookkeeping as an illustration of
algebraic equations in his famous Summa mathematics book in 1494.
A second mistake is to assume Pacioli invented double-entry bookkeeping. The
origins of double-entry bookkeeping are unknown and this type of bookkeeping
is only illustrated by Pacioli in Summa.
From this wonderful mathematics history site on
December 18, 2018 ---
https://www.maa.org/news/on-this-day
Cuthbert Tunstall died in Lambeth, London, England in 1559. He wrote (in
Latin in 1552) the first arithmetic book printed in England, which he
based on
Pacioli's
Summa de arithmetica.
More information about:
Cuthbert Tunstall
Luca Pacioli
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting history are at
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory01.htm#AccountingHistory
American Accounting Association 2016 Centennial Video (Short and Sweet)
---
http://commons.aaahq.org/pages/home
This video may only be available to AAA Commons subscribers (free I think)
History of The Accounting Review published by the AAA ---
http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/395wpTAR/Web/TAR395wp.htm
Chronicle of Higher Education: How
Political Science Became Irrelevant
The field turned its back on the Beltway
https://www.chronicle.com/article/How-Political-Science-Became/245777?utm_source=cr&utm_medium=en&cid=cr
In a 2008
speech to the Association of American Universities, the former Texas A&M
University president and then-Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates declared
that "we must again embrace eggheads and ideas." He went on to recall the
role of universities as "vital centers of new research" during the Cold War.
The late Thomas Schelling would have agreed. The Harvard economist and Nobel
laureate once described "a wholly unprecedented ‘demand’ for the results of
theoretical work. … Unlike any other country … the United States had a
government permeable not only by academic ideas but by academic people."
Gates’s
efforts to bridge the gap between Beltway and ivory tower came at a time
when it was growing wider, and indeed, that gap has continued to grow in the
years since. According to a Teaching, Research & International Policy
Project
survey,
a regular poll of international-relations scholars, very few believe they
should not contribute to policy making in some way. Yet a majority also
recognize that the state-of-the-art approaches of academic social science
are precisely those approaches that policy makers find least helpful. A
related poll of senior national-security decision-makers confirmed that, for
the most part, academic social science is not giving them what they want.
The problem, in a
nutshell, is that scholars increasingly privilege rigor over relevance. That
has become strikingly apparent in the subfield of international security
(the part of political science that once most successfully balanced those
tensions), and has now fully permeated political science as a whole. This
skewed set of intellectual priorities — and the field’s transition into a
cult of the irrelevant — is the unintended result of disciplinary
professionalization.
The
decreasing relevance of political science flies in the face of a widespread
and longstanding optimism about the compatibility of rigorous social science
and policy relevance that goes back to the Progressive Era and the very dawn
of modern American social science. One of the most important figures in the
early development of political science, the University of Chicago’s Charles
Merriam, epitomized the ambivalence among political scientists as to whether
what they did was "social science as activism or technique," as the
American-studies scholar Mark C. Smith put it. Later, the growing tension
between rigor and relevance would lead to what David M. Ricci
termed
the "tragedy of political science": As the discipline sought to become more
scientific, in part to better address society’s ills, it became less
practically relevant.
When
political scientists seek rigor, they increasingly conflate it with the use
of particular methods such as statistics or formal modeling. The sociologist
Leslie A. White
captured
that ethos as early as 1943:
We may thus gauge
the ‘scientific-ness’ of a study by observing the extent to which it employs
mathematics — the more mathematics the more scientific the study. Physics is
the most mature of the sciences, and it is also the most mathematical.
Sociology is the least mature of the sciences and uses very little
mathematics. To make sociology scientific, therefore, we should make it
mathematical.
Relevance, in
contrast, is gauged by whether scholarship contributes to the making of
policy decisions.
That increasing
tendency to embrace methods and models for their own sake rather than
because they can help us answer substantively important questions is, I
believe, a misstep for the field. This trend is in part the result of the
otherwise normal and productive workings of science, but it is also
reinforced by less legitimate motives, particularly organizational
self-interest and the particularities of our intellectual culture.
While the
use of statistics and formal models is not by definition irrelevant, their
edging out of qualitative approaches has over time made the discipline less
relevant to policy makers. Many pressing policy questions are not readily
amenable to the preferred methodological tools of political scientists.
Qualitative case studies most often produce the research that policy makers
need, and yet the field is moving away from them.
Continued in article
Jensen Comment
This sounds so, so familiar. The same type of practitioner irrelevancy commenced
in the 1960s when when academic accounting became "accountics science" ---
About the time when The Accounting Review stopped
publishing submissions that did not have equations and practicing accountants
dropped out of the American Accounting Association and stopped subscribing to
academic accounting research journals.
An Analysis of the Contributions of The Accounting
Review Across 80 Years: 1926-2005 --- http://faculty.trinity.edu/rjensen/395wpTAR/Web/TAR395wp.htm
Co-authored with Jean Heck and forthcoming in the December 2007 edition of
the Accounting Historians Journal.
Unlike engineering, academic accounting research is no
longer a focal point of practicing accountants. If we gave a prize for academic
research discovery that changed the lives of the practicing profession who would
practitioners choose to honor for the findings?
The silence is deafening!
Accounting History Research Topics—An Analysis of Leading
Journals, 2006–2015
Accounting Historians Journal
Article Volume 45, Issue 1 (June 2018)
https://aaajournals.org/doi/full/10.2308/aahj-10567
Gary P.
Spraakman
York University
Martin
Quinn
<